The second half of last year was not good for us financially. Not good at all. Bottom line is, we got into a load of credit card debt. About $28,000 worth. EEK.
To keep afloat we did what we could without destroying our credit, going delinquent or getting in over our heads. We had 2 credit cards already and opened up 3 new ones which all have 0% APRs currently. Two of them will be paid off completely in Sept when their 0% APRs expire. A third credit card ($1900 @ 12% APR) will be paid off either next month or by Sept. So, at least that's SOME progress!
That leaves two credit cards:
USAA - $13,720 @ 5.99% APR (no expiration)
Citi- $7,950 @ 0% (until Dec 31)
CURRENT TOTAL (these 2 cards only) - $21,670
Obviously I had hoped that we could pay off the Citi card before the 0% expired, but at this rate that is not going to happen. The post-intro APR is probably going to be about 13%, which I'm not looking forward to.
Coincidentally, just yesterday I got a 0% balance transfer offer in the mail from USAA. The transferred balance would get 0% until July 2007 -- six months beyond Citi's 0% period. BUT... We only have $3300 available on the USAA account to use for the balance transfer. That's going to leave about $4700 on the Citi card. Based on our payment budget, it will still be around $4000 when the 0% expires and the 13% APR kicks in.
So, now that you have all the details... Here's my question:
I have about $8000 in my old 401k. I left my previous job in January but did NOT roll it over. (I do have a Roth IRA, BTW.) My mom suggested that I look into cashing it out, paying the 10% penalty fee and applicable taxes, and use the remainder to pay off the Citi card. (She also mentioned that if I wait to cash it out until January 2007, then I won't have to claim it on my tax returns until 2008, so that gives us a bit more time to save up for that.)
I've done a little bit of research about this online, but I haven't had much luck. The things I end up finding about cashing out 401ks are either too technical for me to understand, or don't go into enough detail in plain English. I realize there are hardship qualifiers for cashing out and avoiding the tax, but our situation doesn't seem to be eligible for that.
Another thing is, most online resources that discuss cashing out 401ks seem to say the same thing: "DON'T DO IT!" But we are living hand-to-mouth as it is. I don't want to be paying off this debt for years and years. I feel that if we can at least limit our debt to our very low interest USAA card, that will help us really chip away at it.
So........ What do we do?
Do we cash in my 401k? Do we forget about cashing it in, and instead roll it over to my Roth IRA, so we can use those funds for a downpayment on our first home (whenever THAT will be!)? We have plans we'd like to start fulfilling -- owning a home, starting a family -- but we can't until this debt is eliminated, or at least mostly gone.
Any thoughts?? If you have any other suggestions for how to get rid of this debt that are unrelated to the 401k thing, feel free to post those as well.
Sorry so long... Thanks for reading and I'd appreciate any feedback.
~ Jenney

To keep afloat we did what we could without destroying our credit, going delinquent or getting in over our heads. We had 2 credit cards already and opened up 3 new ones which all have 0% APRs currently. Two of them will be paid off completely in Sept when their 0% APRs expire. A third credit card ($1900 @ 12% APR) will be paid off either next month or by Sept. So, at least that's SOME progress!

That leaves two credit cards:
USAA - $13,720 @ 5.99% APR (no expiration)
Citi- $7,950 @ 0% (until Dec 31)
CURRENT TOTAL (these 2 cards only) - $21,670
Obviously I had hoped that we could pay off the Citi card before the 0% expired, but at this rate that is not going to happen. The post-intro APR is probably going to be about 13%, which I'm not looking forward to.
Coincidentally, just yesterday I got a 0% balance transfer offer in the mail from USAA. The transferred balance would get 0% until July 2007 -- six months beyond Citi's 0% period. BUT... We only have $3300 available on the USAA account to use for the balance transfer. That's going to leave about $4700 on the Citi card. Based on our payment budget, it will still be around $4000 when the 0% expires and the 13% APR kicks in.
So, now that you have all the details... Here's my question:
I have about $8000 in my old 401k. I left my previous job in January but did NOT roll it over. (I do have a Roth IRA, BTW.) My mom suggested that I look into cashing it out, paying the 10% penalty fee and applicable taxes, and use the remainder to pay off the Citi card. (She also mentioned that if I wait to cash it out until January 2007, then I won't have to claim it on my tax returns until 2008, so that gives us a bit more time to save up for that.)
I've done a little bit of research about this online, but I haven't had much luck. The things I end up finding about cashing out 401ks are either too technical for me to understand, or don't go into enough detail in plain English. I realize there are hardship qualifiers for cashing out and avoiding the tax, but our situation doesn't seem to be eligible for that.
Another thing is, most online resources that discuss cashing out 401ks seem to say the same thing: "DON'T DO IT!" But we are living hand-to-mouth as it is. I don't want to be paying off this debt for years and years. I feel that if we can at least limit our debt to our very low interest USAA card, that will help us really chip away at it.
So........ What do we do?

Any thoughts?? If you have any other suggestions for how to get rid of this debt that are unrelated to the 401k thing, feel free to post those as well.
Sorry so long... Thanks for reading and I'd appreciate any feedback.
~ Jenney
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