Some of the Features of Online Personal Finance Software
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Some of the Features of Online Personal Finance Software
As the Internet has exploded, many people have begun to rely on computers to assist with budgeting. Online personal finance is a multi-billion per year industry. Initially it was popular in helping small businesses with budgeting and tax concerns, but as the computer has become ubiquitous in American homes, average people have begun to regard the computer as indispensible to their personal finance needs.
One of the first, and most attractive, ways that online personal finance tools can help the average person is through automated bill pay. This is a very busy time for the average person who is working more than ever, has a family to attend to, and the many other stresses of day to day life. Automated bill pay is quite simple. The online personal finance software links a person’s checking account to their various monthly expenses. It even allows for a person to specify when they would like the bills to be paid. This makes things much easier as this ensures the account is never overdrawn. Most automated payments are made after payday. This can be done for fixed expenses such as Internet or cable TV. Variable expenses can be paid in full or with a specified amount. It not only makes sure that all of the bills are paid and nothing slips through the cracks, resulting in late fees. It also guarantees that the bills are paid before any irresponsible spending takes place. One of the goals of online personal finance is to ensure that a person lives within their means. If all of the bills are paid before any money can be spent this becomes a much more reasonable goal. Certainly there sometimes need to be other changes to one’s spending habits that need to be made, but it’s an important first step.
Another helpful feature of online personal finance is the built in tax software. Not everyone has very complex taxes. Obviously some people don’t have a family and don’t have a house or any investments. These people’s taxes are quite simple to deal with. However most people that are looking to do some budgeting have more complex situations. Real estate is a great investment for the tax breaks it gives. Having online personal finance software saves money by avoiding having to go to a tax professional and ensures there aren’t any mistakes or missed deductions. When people are using online personal finance software to remedy their bad habits, they often overlook tax considerations. Back taxes are often particularly difficult to deal with and online personal finance software can help in this regard. The larger one’s family is or the greater the number of investments someone has, the more likely it is that they have tricky taxes and need online personal finance software.
Jeff Nelson gives advice on money management. His advice helps you to eliminate your debt faster. To make online personal finance easy and set up your Budget for each category you are targeting, visit www.mint.com
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February 14, 2011 No Comments
No Credit Check Student Loans: Good Option for the Students to Fulfill Education Needs
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No Credit Check Student Loans: Good Option for the Students to Fulfill Education Needs
No Credit Check Student Loans are the relief for the students who are under the bad credit history and they don’t fulfill the education necessities. Then bad credit students can apply for No Credit Check Student Loans. The borrowers of No Credit Check Student Loans don’t require credit check, co-signer or collateral to place No Credit Check Student Loans. The bad credit students can’t find better loans than No Credit Check Student Loans. When the bad credit students will apply for No Credit Check Student Loans, they will find attractive process of No Credit Check Student Loans as their No Credit Check Student Loans amount will be sectioned into their account in their college bank automatically within few hours on the same day they apply. Seeing high label study No Credit Check Student Loans have brought large amount its range from 0 to 000. If the students have good credit history, the amount range can surmount on their requirements. But before applying for No Credit Check Student Loans the applicant must be more than 18 years or he/she is studying in UG, PG and active checking account must be at least 6 months old. They can get No Credit Check Student Loans and they can meet all your requirements like tuition fee, hostel fee, and extra charges like purchase of books and so on. Generally a graduate student can avail a loan amount of up to 000. The interest rate is low for the students who avail No Credit Check Student Loans. Availing No Credit Check Student Loans over internet is very simple and fast. When you will apply online for No Credit Check Student Loans, you will find several lenders providing No Credit Check Student Loans. But you are to opt a right lender one of those lenders, the lender will provide you an online No Credit Check Student Loans application form to fill up personal details according to application form. The lender will complete rest of the work and after verification the No Credit Check Student Loans will be transferred into student’s account by the flexible within few hours. After No Credit Check Student Loans the students can use No Credit Check Student Loans for purchasing important objects like computer, books or others. The repayment of No Credit Check Student Loans is for 84 months and if this repayment is less for your study, No Credit Check Student Loans can be repaid by completing their study. After using No Credit Check Student Loans the students can bright their career.
Jonesh Taylor has done his master in finance and now he is expert in finance and insurance. Student loans no credit check – org to find Internet Payday Loans, Same Day No Teletrack Payday Loans, College Loans For Students , Student Debt Consolidation Loans, No Credit Check Student Loans, online payday loan, visit http://www.studentloansnocreditcheck.org
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[Part 4] Sallie Mae is the largest student loan company. We look at a 60 Minutes report on Sallie Mae and how Sallie Mae, with the help of government, makes a lot of money off of student borrowers.
February 12, 2011 No Comments
5 Credit Tips for College Students
The Numbers Look The Same on Your Credit Card

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The World is corrupt, whatever you want, sex, drugs, religion-use your credit card-the numbers look the same
5 Credit Tips for College Students
Some credit tips for college students
How we handle our credit determines to a large extent how secure we feel in our lives. College students are no exception to this rule. A large part of our financial lives depends on how good our credit ratings are. However, if students follow the credit tips mentioned below, they are less likely to face any serious problems.
1. Follow a budget
Living on a budget is perhaps one of the most important credit tips for college students. . When a month begins, note down all your monthly expenses in the order of what you will need to pay first. Once you have fixed your priorities, pay the items from your income accordingly. Make sure that you do not spend any money on anything outside these categories till you have paid all your expenses first. Budgeting in this way serves another purpose. It increases your understanding of your own financial condition and dissuades you from spending money on unnecessary items. In this way, it reduces the possibility of a credit problem in the future.
2. Begin a credit history
In order to begin your credit history, open your savings and checking accounts. In the next step, try using a student credit card – but only to make those purchases that you’d make anyway and then make full payments on time every month with the funds from your checking account. Daily transactions will gradually play a key role in your credit worthiness.
3. One credit card only
Using only one credit card is also one of the most important credit tips for students. In fact, more than one credit is not required at all if you use it to make only planned purchases and pay it off every month. Although the limits start off quite low, they go up as you buy things and pay your bills on time. It has been observed over the years that a college student using more than one credit card is more likely to face credit troubles.
4. Be responsible
It is also imperative that you act responsibly and pay your credit card bills on time. Remember that any failure to pay your bills on time will damage your credit for several years. So pay earlier if possible, but never late. Try to remain within the limits of your credit card as well.
5. Check credit reports regularly
Remember that unscrupulous elements of this world won’t spare you just because you are a student. So make it a point to check your credit report regularly for any irregularities. You are entitled to check your credit report for free every year.
So these credit tips should be followed by every student if credit problems are to be avoided in the future.
Delray Credit Counseling offers Debt Consolidation and credit counseling. A more educated consumer is a debt free consumer.
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January 11, 2011 No Comments
Personal Finances – K.i.s.s.ing your Checking and Credit Card Accounts
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Personal Finances – K.i.s.s.ing your Checking and Credit Card Accounts
My Dad and father-in-law were at both ends of the spectrum when it came to managing their checking accounts. Dad would spend hours, sometimes days, tracking down a two cent error in his checkbook register. It drove him bonkers when his checkbook didn’t balance to the penny with the account statement.
My father-in-law, on the other hand, didn’t even keep a checkbook register. He couldn’t be bothered with balancing his account. His philosophy was, “If I run out of money the bank will let me know.” That is a hands off approach that few of us can get away with, but, it worked for a person that was born and lived in a town of less than 800 people. The bank did, indeed, let my father-in-law know when he was overdrawn. They never, to my knowledge, charged him overdraft fees.
That approach can work in a small town in Northern Idaho. Most of us, however, do not have that kind of a relationship with our bank. In order for our personal finances to run smoothly, it is our responsibility to make the lifestyle choices, and do the work associated with managing our day-to-day finances. How we handle our checking account and credit card transactions is fundamental to keeping things running well.
My Approach Is Somewhere In The Middle
My approach to managing our family checkbook register is somewhere between the two parental extremes cited above. My wife, Lois, and I record all transactions in our register and, like clockwork, I balance our account every month. What I don’t do is spend an unnecessary amount of time trying to find errors when our account doesn’t balance with the statement. If the error is within comfortable limits, I adjust the account balance and then get on with my life. What’s a “comfortable limit?” That depends on the account balance. My error tolerance is directly proportional to how much money we have on hand when the error occurs. Balancing errors don’t happen very often. More often than not our checkbook balances to the penny. The accuracy can be attributed in some measure to the fact that I use personal finance management software.
The point is that personal finances do require some work, but, perfection may not be desirable. There are a lot of people involved in the processing of the various transactions each of us generates as part of our monetary lives. Those millions upon millions of transactions, large and small, are all subject to our own human error as well as the human errors that can be committed by all of those people behind the scenes who we rarely think about. It behooves us, therefore, to keep tabs on the pulse of our personal finances as recorded in our checkbook and credit card accounts. This ongoing monitoring can be psychotic or a normal, healthy part of our lives. It’s up to each one of us to decide where we stand on this issue. Will we adopt a fringe behavior like one of my parents? Or will we keep it sane and simple (K.I.S.S.)?
Using Tools Imposes Lifestyle Choices
Using a cash flow management tool forces you to make choices by imposing lifestyle traits that are required if the tool is going to work as intended. That may sound intimidating, but, for a well written, user friendly program, the required lifestyle traits are not an undue burden. For those of us who are sincerely interested in having “more money than month” instead of “more month than money,” developing a few, possibly new habits need not be a harsh adjustment. The payback in financial peace of mind is very well worth it.
Choices We Make Regardless
First, let’s take a look at those habits that will make your financial life easier regardless of whether or not you use personal finance software.
* Keep your checkbook register accurate. Your checking account is probably your primary money management tool. It just makes common sense, in my opinion, to keep your checkbook register up-to-date and accurate. If you are not used to writing every transaction (e.g. checks, ATM transactions, deposits) in your checkbook register, or balancing your checkbook every month, these are habits you may want to look at developing immediately. Should you decide to use a money management program, an accurate checkbook is imperative.
* Keep an accurate record of charge transactions. If you use charge cards, keeping an accurate record of your charges and returns is also vital to the success of your cash flow management efforts. In my opinion, not keeping track of charges is a main contributor to why many people get into trouble with charge card debt. I think it is vitally important that, starting today, you keep the receipts from all of your charge transactions for no other reason than for reconciling your monthly credit card statement. If you are using appropriate personal finance software, charge transactions are entered into the program as soon as convenient. The program will, with accurate charging information, keep you informed of where you stand on your charge card debt.
Choices Imposed By Software
The following issues are specific to the successful use of many personal finance programs.
* One checking account. How people manage their personal funds is very, well, personal. For a single person, the choices are simplified. Once a person takes on a partner, however, personal finances can become complicated depending on how much financial autonomy each partner requires. Regardless of how many savings and checking accounts each single or partnered person may have, at least one checking account is normally required for use with the software. This one checking account, coupled with the program, is used to plan for and pay bills; plan and pay for planned purchases; and to smooth out weekly living expenses. The intent is for the program and it’s associated checking account to encapsulate a person’s entire month-to-month financial records.
* Pay bills on a schedule. Instead of paying bills when you receive them or when you get paid, pay your bills on the same days each month. An appropriate schedule for most people would be on the 1st and 15th of each month. The mechanics of bill payment (e.g. check, cash, online, automatic withdrawal) are entirely up to you, but, sitting down twice a month and arranging for your bills to be paid on or before the date they are due will simplify and smooth the paying of your bills.
* Pay yourself on a schedule. “Paying” yourself a fixed amount of spending money the same day each week regardless of when you receive your income will smooth out your day-to-day expenses. How much weekly spending money you give yourself is entirely up to you as is the weekday on which you “pay” yourself. The trick is to find that amount of weekly spending money that is enough for day-to-day expenses, but not so much that you don’t leave yourself enough to pay bills. An appropriately written personal finance program will automatically include your personal “payday” in your month-to-month financial projection so you can easily see whether you have correctly set your weekly spending money amount.
* Keep accurate records. An appropriately written personal finance program gives you a “forward looking” projection of your month-to-month cash flow. When using such a tool, keeping your cash flow projection current is the key to giving you a continual picture of where you are and where you’re headed. You will, therefore, have to be consistent with keeping your month-to-month financial records current. With the right personal finance software, this does not have to be a big chore like keeping track of every penny you spend, or entering and categorizing every check you write. In an appropriately written personal finance program, most of your record keeping will consist of entering bills when you receive them, entering charges as you incur them, paying yourself once a week, reconciling bank and charge account statements, and paying bills. Typically, all of this financial activity will take two to four hours per month.
Paperwork Flow
There are a couple of habits that Lois and I have developed that simplify tasks like the keeping of accurate records. When any piece of paper is received on which is recorded a financial transaction, that piece of paper is placed in our “In” basket. While most of our financial transactions are handled electronically, there are still items like charge slips, magazine subscriptions and account statements that are printed. By placing all such printed items in one place, they get recorded in our computer records accurately and in a timely manner. It is unusual for one of our paper transactions to be forgotten.
Those pieces of paper that are needed for account reconciliation, like credit card receipts, are put into a “Hold” folder after having been recorded in our personal finance software. Those pieces of paper that are not needed after being recorded are shredded or burned. After reconciling credit card statements, all of the pieces of paper for transactions that have cleared are removed from the “Hold” folder and also destroyed.
It’s a simple system, but, it works for us. As long as everyone in a household knows the “paperwork flow,” and habitually uses that flow, the chances that transactions will be lost, resulting in potential financial errors, are greatly reduced.
Being Big Brother To Your Checking Account
Another habit that I have adopted is the close, online supervision of our checking account. I’m a big fan of online banking which gives me almost up to the minute information about the status of our checking account. As part of my computer startup procedure, I take a look at the activity in our checking account. This may sound a bit paranoid, but, I’ve been able to spot unexpected activity on several occasions. There has been nothing traumatic like identity theft, but, by keeping a close eye on checking account activity I’ve caught unexpected withdrawals shortly after they happened instead of being surprised on the next account statement. The most recent example involved automatic credit card payments that I thought I had cancelled. It took two months working with the credit card company’s customer service staff to straighten that one out. Had I not spotted the first unexpected payment when it happened, our checking account could have been short by .00 each of those two months. That may not be a large amount, but, it could have been enough to cause a potential, inconvenient problem if left undetected.
Financial Peace Of Mind
All of the discussed lifestyle habits are so firmly embedded in Lois and my everyday lives that we no longer even think about them. Consequently, our month-to-month finances are smooth with few interruptions. When we do have to discuss financial issues, it’s a discussion over known choices instead of fights over who is doing, or not doing what. Money is not a source of discord in our lives like it can be for couples. Lois and I have been enjoying financial peace of mind for most of the 40+ years of our marriage. This financial bliss can be attributed directly to the unique cash flow techniques upon which our personal finance management software is based.
George Gilbert writes software for personal computers. One of his popular titles is myOwnPayday, an innovative approach to personal finance that was created out of practical necessity. Find out more about this innovative program at 2goodsoftware.com.
Article from articlesbase.com

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Video Rating: 5 / 5
December 20, 2010 No Comments
Choosing Checking Accounts With the Lowest Bank Fees
Choosing Checking Accounts With the Lowest Bank Fees
Banks make most of their money through convenience fees charged to customers. When you are in the market for a new checking account or want to move to a new bank, there are a number of things you should take into consideration before selecting the bank to open your checking account with.
Insurance
It used to be very rare for a bank to fail. The current economy has increased bank failures though, and when looking to open any bank account, it’s important to take the possibility of a bank failure into consideration. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp insures deposits from eligible banks and financial institutions in the US up to 0,000 per depositor. Make sure your bank is covered by the FDIC before you open an account with them.
Choosing a Checking Account
Most everyone relies on a checking account in order to pay their bills and hang on to their money before it’s needed for a purchase or expense. You have a number of checking accounts from which to choose, from free accounts (no maintenance fees) that don’t require a minimum balance; to accounts that offer interest if you maintain a certain minimum balance; to money market deposit accounts with higher interest paid but higher minimums required and a limit to the number of transactions you can make in any given month. There are specialty accounts for groups of people, too – like student checking, or senior citizen accounts.
Compare your local bank checking account options with online checking account options to find an account that will charge you the least amount of fees and provide the most interest for how you are likely to use the account.
Avoiding Overdraft Fees
People who live paycheck to paycheck often end up paying hundreds of dollars each year in the form of bank overdraft fees. At an average of per occurrence, overdrafts are costly fees that you should do everything in your power to avoid! What happens when your account falls short is the bank will honor the largest debit or check that’s outstanding first, which means each of your smaller checks will result in individual, overdraft fees. Instead of bouncing a single check, you end up paying an NSF (non sufficient fund) on each of the individual transactions.
While many banks will cover the non sufficient funds for you under “overdraft protection” all that means is your money is paid out to the person or business you wrote the check for or used your debit card for; but that the bank will charge you for that privilege. See if you can get standard overdraft protection, and link your checking account to a savings account. If your account is overdrawn they can tap into your savings account for the funds instead of charging you for the NSF.
Some banks hold your deposits for 10 business days for larger or nonlocal checks. Standard wait time for a regular check deposit can be 2-4 business days. This can make it difficult – if you are cutting things close, always find out when a deposit will come available so you know when you can use the money from the deposit.
Understand Your Debit Card
Almost all checking accounts include a debit card, but this is another way for banks to make money off their account holders. Sometimes if you use the debit card as debit at the retailer, you pay a fee – but if you chose credit instead at the same retailer, it wouldn’t cost you anything more than the cost of whatever you’re buying.
Using your debit card in an ATM machine owned by another bank will result in paying fees to the other bank, and your own bank as well. Paying or to take out in cash is never a good idea, but you may not even realize it since the ATM only announces the fees of their OWN bank (not what your bank will add at the end of the month).
Using a debit card to reserve travel accommodations or purchase gas sometimes puts a hold on your account that’s more than what you actually spend. It can take a week or two for the hold to be lifted, and meanwhile you don’t have access to any of those funds which can result in overdrafts if you’re not aware.
Debbie Dragon writes for DepositAccounts.com, on the topic of savings accounts, checking accounts, IRAs, money market and certificate of deposits. Compare dozens of banks with just one click.
Checking Account Vs HELOC

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August 30, 2010 2 Comments