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Home » 5 everyday habits that quietly make debt worse
5 everyday habits that quietly make debt worse
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5 everyday habits that quietly make debt worse

News RoomBy News RoomJune 12, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

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For many people, debt happens slowly and then all at once.

Austin Kilgore, analyst for the Achieve Center for Consumer Insights at Achieve, notes that “consumers are overwhelmed by debt and the cost-of-living crisis.” 

According to Kilgore, 57% of consumers estimate it would take 6 months or longer to pay off all their short-term, unsecured debt like credit cards, buy now pay later loans, personal loans and medical debt.

What’s more, 35% say it’s “very difficult” or “difficult” to maintain on-time debt payments.

Outside of medical or legal emergencies, debt doesn’t explode overnight — it grows through tiny, unexamined actions like adding subscriptions and not reviewing your spending every month.

Even people and households with substantial incomes can find themselves in a deepening cycle of debt when unexamined spending is accompanied by a lack of insight into unconscious habits.

Here are the five habits that make your debt problem worse without you even realizing it.

Habit 1: Paying the minimum amount on your credit card

Almost any major credit card will let you set up automatic recurring withdrawals from a checking account, and the “Minimum Payment” is always one of the standard options.

Banks are happy to let you do this. According to the Federal Reserve, 80% of the money banks make from credit cards comes from interest payments on people who hold a balance from month to month. Fees make up most of the remaining 20 percent, and people who don’t pay off their cards every month are much more likely to also pay fees.

Leslie Tayne, a bankruptcy attorney and founder of the Tayne Law Group, says, “One more habit that certainly makes debt worse is ignoring the debt altogether or making only minimum payments, and continuing to spend. Ignoring debt won’t make the debt go away and only worsens the situation due to compounding interest and damaging credit scores.”

Paying off a $1,000 credit card debt by making a fixed $100 monthly payment instead of only the monthly minimum dramatically reduces your interest costs and eliminates your debt years faster. 

Assuming a standard 22% Annual Percentage Rate (APR) and a typical minimum payment structure (the greater of 2% of the balance plus interest, or a $25 floor), paying only the minimum traps you in debt for 57 months (nearly five years) and costs you $561.92 in interest. 

Conversely, bumping that contribution up to a flat $100 per month wipes out the entire balance in just 12 months and limits your extra interest payments to $114.89, putting $447.03 back into your pocket.

Strategy Monthly Payment Time to Pay Off Total Interest Paid Total Amount Paid
Minimum Payments Only Decreasing (starts at ~$38, drops to $25) 57 months $561.92 $1,561.92
Fixed $100 Monthly Flat $100 12 months $114.89 $1,114.89

Habit 2: Treating credit limits as available income

Banks can also increase your credit limit if you make regular payments — whether you request an increase or not. You can also request a credit limit increase within three to six months of opening your account.

Having more credit isn’t necessarily a problem. In fact, it can be good for your credit score if you don’t carry a balance. Your credit utilization ratio, which is the percentage of your available credit you are currently using, accounts for 20% to 30% of your credit score, according to consumer reporting agency Experian.

That means the higher your available credit and the lower the balance of debt you carry, the lower your credit utilization is. That’s why financial experts recommend that you don’t cancel credit cards without a maintenance fee that you don’t frequently use.

But thinking that you have $10,000, $20,000 or even $30,000 to spend because that’s your credit limit is a habit with the power to break your bank for years, if not decades. For example, if you owe $20,000 on a credit card with a 21% annual percentage rate, the minimum monthly payment will cost $550 and take nearly 35 years until it’s paid off — and that assumes you don’t spend another dime on that card until it’s paid off..

Habit 3: The “I’ll pay it off next month” trap

In 1980, the psychologist Neil Weinstein published an article in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology titled Unrealistic optimism about future life events. It was the beginning of what behavioral economists came to call the optimism bias.

When it comes to credit card debt, this bias convinces you that your future self will easily handle today’s financial burdens. You spend with the assumption that a future promotion, a higher-paying job, or a sudden windfall will dramatically increase your income. 

This false sense of security can lead to overspending because you view current debt as a temporary problem that your future, wealthier self will effortlessly solve.

What actually happens is the creation of a mindset that invites financial danger through compounding bad habits. You might justify minor charges — like a daily coffee or subscription services — thinking they are too insignificant to cause harm. But making small purchases over time without paying them off in the month they are made will cause debt to creep.

Because you expect a future financial rescue, you ignore the growing balance, and instead of disappearing, those tiny, unmanaged expenses quietly accumulate. High interest rates compound the total, turning a series of negligible choices into an overwhelming financial mountain.

Habit 4: Relying on Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) for essentials

Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) programs are marketed as budget-friendly tools, but if used without caution and circumspection, they can quickly undermine your long-term financial recovery.

Breaking transactions into four “easy” bi-weekly installments creates a dangerous cognitive illusion. This friction-free checkout process masks the total amount of money you are legally liable to pay. By focusing only on the small fractional cost, consumers routinely overspend on non-essential items, unknowingly inflating their total balance sheet and compounding their existing debt problems.

Using BNPL services for multiple simultaneous purchases creates severe tracking and budgeting problems. Because these automated installments operate outside of traditional monthly billing cycles, multiple payment due dates quickly stack up. This friction can cause critical cash crunches when fragmented BNPL bills collide with fixed, high-priority obligations like rent and utilities.

According to Carrie Grimes, founder and CEO of WorkMoney and author of “The Joy of Money,” “Credit cards are bad, but at least they’re honest about being bad. Every month, you get one statement showing every dollar you owe to one company, and what it’s costing you to be in debt. With BNPL, the debt is scattered across Klarna, Afterpay, Affirm, PayPal Pay-in-4 and your favorite store’s house brand.”

Habit 5: Ignoring statements and balancing acts

Grimes also points out that BNPL schemes are easy to lose track of if you’re not diligent about keeping up with your payments. 

“Almost two-thirds of BNPL borrowers have multiple loans running at the same time, and a third have loans across different companies. A LendingTree 2025 survey found nearly 1 in 3 BNPL users have lost track of a payment they owe.”

Behavioral economics calls this the Ostrich Syndrome, which is the anxious avoidance of bank balances and credit card statements. It can lead to expensive late fees and missed interest rate hikes. 

Similar to the Ostrich Syndrome is the habit of “shuffling the deck” by using one form of debt to pay off another, like using a credit card to pay for necessities like utilities and groceries. These bad habits are like stealthy financial leaks that feel like survival tactics in the moment but secretly supercharge your debt behind your back.

Moving money from a credit card to pay a utility bill doesn’t actually make the bill go away. It just disguises the debt and dresses it up in a much higher interest rate.

Both habits trick your brain into feeling a temporary sense of relief. In reality, they act as a compounding trap that quietly buries you deeper in debt.

Fixes don’t come easy — but they’re worth it

You know the saying, “Nothing good in life is easy or free.” 

Breaking a frustrating debt cycle is about rewriting the daily habits that quietly drain your wallet. 

One of the best fixes for bad spending habits is to install a mandatory 24-hour cooling-off period for any non-essential purchase you cannot instantly cover with hard cash, and treat all “Buy Now, Pay Later” offers exactly like traditional high-interest debt and cap your active installment plans at zero. 

To keep yourself energized and on track, set up a weekly 15-minute financial check-in to celebrate your progress, log your balances and spot messy trends before they take over. 

If you need help, there are services that can keep you on track and lower your bills.

Unfortunately, even all the austerity you can muster can’t always overcome the math of compound interest. There are several alternatives to reduce your interest payments and get yourself on track:

  • Personal (debt consolidation) loan: If you have credit card and other high-interest debts, this may offer a lower rate, a fixed monthly payment and a clear repayment timeline, depending on what you can qualify for.
  • Balance transfer: These credit cards, with low or zero interest rates, offer the chance to transfer the higher-rate credit card so you can pay it off at the low rate. The key, though, is to do so within the limited period of the low rate.
  • Debt management plans: These plans, offered by credit counseling firms, lower the interest rate on a credit card.
  • Debt settlement: Some people are in the position where they simply can’t make even minimum payments. Debt settlement, which works by negotiating with creditors to lower principal balances due, may help.
  • Home equity: Homeowners who have lived in their homes for several years may have built up substantial equity. That equity can be a valuable financial resource, allowing qualified borrowers to consolidate debt through a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or home equity loan, often at a lower rate than credit cards.

Ultimately, escaping the financial hamster wheel requires changing your behavior, not just your income. Pick just one “quiet” habit to change today and swap it for a healthy boundary to stop the slide and build momentum!

FAQs

What are the 5 C’s of debt?

The 5 “C”s of debt — also known as the 5 Cs of credit — are character, capacity, capital, collateral and conditions. Character refers to your credit history, which is a story told about your ability to be responsible with money based on your record of debt repayment. Capacity is your ability to pay back a loan based on your income and current debt load. Capital is your current net worth. Collateral is the assets or property you can pledge to secure a loan  in case you can’t pay back the loan. Conditions refer to external factors like the interest rate and the broader economy.

What is the biggest killer of credit scores?

Missed or late payments can lead to collections and in the worst cases, bankruptcy. These have the biggest impact on your credit score followed closely by a high credit utilization ratio. The credit utilization ratio is the amount of money you have borrowed divided by the total of your credit limit(s).

What brings up your credit score the most?

The two most effective ways to increase your credit score are maintaining a history of on-time payments and keeping your credit utilization low. Together, these account for 65% of your total FICO score.

Brooklyn-based financial journalist Will Kenton has over a decade of experience covering the intersection of money, economics and culture. Specializing in investing, personal finance and retirement planning, his work has appeared in Investopedia, AP News, Business Insider and TIME Stamped. While at Investopedia, Will was the creative force behind the Anxiety Index, a proprietary tool used to gauge investor sentiment. His expertise is rooted in behavioral economics — a field he explored as associate editor of the New School Economics Review — and he aims to help readers navigate the “predictable irrationality” that influences financial decisions. Will holds a BA from Ohio University, an MA in economics from The New School and a Ph.D. in English literature from NYU. Beyond his financial career, he is also an award-winning playwright featured in the Red Bull Theater’s annual festival.

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