Personal Expense Tracking: Payday Loan to Keep the Lights On
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Personal expense tracking is something that we care about here at Mint. Learn more with great personal expense tracking tips in our blog article index.
Today’s train wreck is about payday loans. One great way to avoid payday loans is through personal expense tracking and solid budgeting.
I think the worst thing I ever did was purchase a car from “Ugly Duckling”, also known now as “Drive Time.” Basically, your down payment is the value of the vehicle, and then you’re hit with huge interest rates. The vehicle I got didn’t last a year before the engine blew, but I still owed 2 more years on it. Definitely teach your little ones to stay away from “buy here, pay here.”
The second worst mistake I’ve made involved “payday advance” places, which hold your check until the next payday, but charge huge rates. I’ve written a $350 check to get only $275 in cash; the rest was their profit. Then the next payday rolls around, and you have to do it all over again.
If you must use one, do it for my first reason, not my last. Initially I simply needed money to cover an electric bill, or my lights would be cut off. I had two choices: let the check bounce (and pay $35 for a bounced check fee while risking some nights by flashlight), or pay $25 for the fee on a check that was enough to cover the electric bill and make a cash deposit in my bank account.
The advance was $10 cheaper, didn’t hurt my credit or risk legal issues with bouncing a check, and kept my lights on.
If I had stuck to just this, everything would have been fine. But the bottom line is, it’s too easy to get caught up in this high interest “loan shark” deal, and soon end up paying a large part of your income in advance loan interest.
By the way, I still don’t blame these places for their high rates: a $35 or even higher fee on a bounced check for $5 is a much higher fee than $25 on $100 loan. What your bank does is a thousand times worse than any pay advance place.
Mint’s Take Away:
While it’s true that a bounced check fee from banks can be quite high, they’re usually an exceptional fee — unlike the fees from a payday loan, which are always imposed upon you for the service. We definitely agree with the poster, though, that it can be very easy to get caught up in the (extremely) high interest “loan shark” deal.
Payday loans often compare their annual percentage rate to that of rates imposed by banks and credit card companies on late fees. In reality, though, payday loans are incredibly costly compared to alternatives available.
Let’s compare the original poster’s cash advance from the payday loan to a cash advance from an average credit card.
Payday loan cash advance: $275 loaned, $75 in fee = 327% APR
Average credit card cash advance cost: 3% fee for amount advanced and 25% APR
Credit card cash advance: $275 loaned, $8.25 in fee and $5.75 in interest if paid off within a month. Total cost? $14.
$14 fee vs. $75 fee for the same $275 loan.
Quite a difference!
Although we will never suggest resorting to cash advance from a credit card, they are by far less costly in interest & fees when compared to a cash advance from a payday loan. In fact, if the credit card cash advance is paid off in two weeks (which is the normal duration of a payday loan), the fees you incur will be even less.
In situations like those described by original poster, an emergency fund will come in quite handy! Read more about the importance of an emergency fund and find out how to get one.
Remember, personal expense tracking is important. Without it, you might need to make some very difficult financial decisions.
Train Wreck Tuesdays are a weekly post of horrible financial mistakes. They are posted anonymously. Submit your story; if you’re selected, you get a free personal finance book. The best comment gets the same prize! Check out past Train Wreck stories here.
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6 Comments so far
leave a commentI always wondered why it really mattered to put away only $5.00 a week if that’s all you have to save. I thought, if I have a real emergency it’s going to cost at least $500-$1000. So it would take someone years to even build an emergency account on $5.00 a week. But this story has made me realize the true importance to saving anything you can. If you really are cut short for an electric bill, you would have that money in your savings. Please always try to save anything you can. That $5.00 will get bigger and bigger as the years go on. Bump it up to $10 next week and you’ll never even notice, then $20, $25 and so on.
Exactly!
Sometimes the small amount can seem very trivial, but over time and gradually increased, savings can build into a substantial emergency fund that really help out situations like those above (and many more).
A cash cushion will definitely let you better handle unexpected financial emergencies!
Sure, a cash advance from your credit card is cheaper than a payday advance. But there is a very good reason why payday loans are so popular: there’s a huge population in this country who cannot get credit cards! It’s easy to suggest cheaper forms of credit but you must consider the customer and what they’re true alternatives may be. Truth is, while payday loans are very expensive forms of credit, they meet a very much needed demand from a population who has no other cheaper alternatives.
Payday loans may serve to meet a legitimate need but I really believe that the reason people resort to them is that they have not completely thought through the alternatives. Payday loan businesses capitalize on the emotional responses of people to simply make a problem go away as soon as possible without thinking of what problems the payday loan itself can cause down the road.
Marcus i agree with you, but when person need extra cash he agree to take payday loans and after it repay them their money. But he agreed and it’s his life.
It’s good that one can reduce debts through personal expense tracking.
We should control our expenses and hold back from unnecessary purchases.