I have $12K in credit-card debt due to health issues and a 30% pay cut. Is it finally time to take a loan from my 401(k)?

I have $12K in credit-card debt due to health issues and a 30% pay cut. Is it finally time to take a loan from my 401(k)?

I have $12K in credit-card debt due to health issues and a 30% pay cut. Is it finally time to take a loan from my 401(k)?

“My only other debt is my mortgage.” (Photo subject is a model.)
“My only other debt is my mortgage.” (Photo subject is a model.) – Getty Images/iStockphoto

I have $12,000 in credit-card debt due to multiple home and auto repairs and a large medical bill. Because of a downturn in my industry, my pay was cut 30%. I always try to only spend what I have, paying off my credit card monthly, but this has gotten away from me. I’m getting a second job, but it will be slow. My only other debt is my mortgage.

I’m thinking about taking a loan from my 401(k) to pay it all off. What do you think?

Indebted

Related: ‘I’m in a financial mess’: My income was cut in half. Do I sell my $600K home and kiss my 2.9% mortgage rate goodbye?

You have around twice the credit-card debt of the average person in the U.S. 
You have around twice the credit-card debt of the average person in the U.S. – MarketWatch illustration

You’re willing and ready to take action. That counts for a lot.

Not everyone has the capacity to build an emergency fund for six or even 12 months, and especially for $12,000, but this is exactly why we should all do our best to have money set aside for a rainy day. You were hit by an imperfect storm of several unexpected bills and I admire your determination to reduce this balance as quickly as possible.

You actually have three choices: pay off your credit card by cutting back on as many expenses as possible; take a loan from your 401(k); or take out a personal loan. Let’s look at the math first: Paying off your credit card (assuming 21% APR) would cost you $19,440 over the next five years, including $7,400 in interest. Not ideal.

Taking a loan from your 401(k) and replenishing it with the 8.25% interest would be broadly breakeven or marginally beneficial with a 7%-plus annual return. The reason: You are repaying yourself $14,636 over that five-year period, with out-of-pocket post-tax dollars, even though you are temporarily forgoing some market growth on your original investment.

You miss growth on the $12,000 while it’s borrowed ($2,400 “lost” at a 7% annual return) but the 8.25% interest paid to yourself grows in the plan ($3,100 more over the period), netting a small gain. Plus, you get your $12,000 cash upfront, and wipe out the credit-card debt and double-digit percentage rate that goes with it.

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