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5 surprising credit card debt consolidation benefits to know
Credit card debt is growing fast in today’s economy. Between the average credit card interest rates sitting above 23% and interest charges compounding daily, even small purchases can balloon into large balances. Add in today’s high costs for housing, food and basic needs, and many Americans have found themselves trapped in a cycle of growing credit card debt.
Debt consolidation offers a potential solution if you’re facing high balances across multiple cards. By consolidating your debt, you roll multiple credit card payments into one loan, often with a better interest rate and predictable payments. Think of it as trading multiple high-interest debts for a more manageable loan.
We consulted three experts from financial planning organizations to learn what makes consolidating debt worth it. Here’s what they want you to know if you’re thinking about this approach.
Learn about the many debt relief strategies available to you now.
5 surprising credit card debt consolidation benefits to know
If credit card debt feels overwhelming, you’re not alone — and there’s hope. According to Tyler Crawford, president of BHG Financial, over 70% of customers keep their debt under control after consolidating.
You have several options for consolidation. Many banks, credit unions and online lenders offer personal loans for this purpose. Balance transfer credit cards are another option worth considering.
Combining multiple debts into one loan can improve your finances in unexpected ways. Here are five powerful benefits:
1. Improvement to your credit score
“If you move credit card balances into an installment loan, it can lower your credit utilization rate,” says Margaret Poe, head of consumer credit education at TransUnion. This rate heavily impacts your credit score. Lower utilization typically means a better score.
Crawford highlights another credit score benefit.
“Paying off multiple high-interest credit cards with a single loan [can help you] avoid late payments,” he says. The new loan comes with one monthly due date, making it easier to pay on time. Regular, punctual payments help build a stronger credit score.
Find out how to get rid of your credit card debt today.
2. Lower interest rates
A debt consolidation loan usually offers much lower interest rates than credit cards.
“Saving money on interest is a huge reason to do debt consolidation,” says Andi Wrenn, a member of the board of directors for the Association for Financial Counseling, Planning Education (AFCPE). With today’s steep credit card rates, switching to a lower-rate consolidation loan can save you thousands in interest charges.
The savings grow even bigger when you make extra payments. Each additional dollar paid reduces your principal balance directly. Lower principal means less money wasted on interest over time.
3. Reduced mental burden
Credit card consolidation does more than prevent missed payments. It can relieve the daily anxiety and mental burden of managing multiple debts. With a predictable payment, you’ll feel in control of your finances and less overwhelmed by the constant stress of tracking various due dates and balances.
4. Fixed repayment terms
Unlike credit cards with variable interest rates, Crawford explains that consolidation loans give you a clear timeline and fixed payment amount. This predictability makes budgeting much easier.
Credit cards can keep you in debt longer because minimum payments barely cover interest. But a consolidation loan gives you a clear finish line. You’ll know from day one when you’ll be debt-free. Each payment brings you closer to that goal, with no surprises along the way.
5. Access to additional financial resources
Many lenders offer financial counseling and budgeting tools when you consolidate. These resources can help you develop better spending habits. You’ll learn strategies to avoid future debt and create a realistic budget that works for your lifestyle. Some may even provide personalized guidance to help you tackle specific challenges, such as building emergency savings and planning major purchases.
The bottom line
Consolidation for debt relief works best when paired with better financial habits and intentional spending. Crawford warns that borrowers can return to recklessly using credit cards after consolidating, not realizing this creates an even bigger debt problem.
If you’re considering credit card debt consolidation, start by learning everything you can about potential lenders.
“Read the fine print and ask good questions — you don’t want to be worse off because you didn’t,” says Wrenn. Then, compare offers from several reputable debt relief companies. Review interest rates, fees and extra services to choose one that fits your needs and helps you stay debt-free in the long term.
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Dental company stocks jump amid RFK Jr.’s health claims about fluoride
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s concerns about the health effects of fluoride may already be helping some Americans — investors in dental services companies.
Shares in Dentsply Sirona, Envista, Henry Schein Patterson Companies, and other providers of dental products are jumping, with Wall Street betting that a potential push by the incoming Trump administration to remove fluoride from the nation’s drinking water could spur demand for the companies’ services.
Kennedy, tapped by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said on social media just ahead of the November 5 presidential election that Trump would rid fluoride from the public water supply on his first day in office. Kennedy, a noted vaccine skeptic, has described fluoride as an “industrial waste” and linked it to arthritis, neurological deficiencies in children and other serious health problems.
“The thought here is RFK will bring to HHS a voice that is in favor of reducing, or eliminating, the amount of fluoridation that is added to drinking water,” Don Bilson, Gordon Haskett’s head of event-driven research, told investors in a report, according to NBC News. “This will, in turn, lead to an acceleration of tooth decay and more dental visits.”
Dental experts have largely refuted such claims. Dr. Aaron Yancoskie, associate dean of academic affairs at Touro College of Dental Medicine, told “CBS Mornings Plus” on November 13 that there is “excellent, solid data going back 75 years showing that fluoride is both safe, and it’s extremely effective at decreasing dental decay, that is, cavities, by strengthening the enamel of our teeth.”
According to KFF Health News, some studies have linked fluoride exposure among pregnant women to a higher risk of childhood neurobehavioral problems and lower IQs, leading experts to call for further research.
Fluoride is a mineral that keeps teeth healthy and reduces cavities by protecting them against bacteria that produces potentially damaging acid, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To prevent tooth decay, the U.S. has been adding a small quantity of fluoride to water since the 1950s.
Stocks have surged since Trump won a second term in the White House, with investors buoyed by his pledges during the campaign against Vice President Kamala Harris to cut corporate taxes and eliminate red tape for businesses.
contributed to this report.
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House Ethics Committee to meet Wednesday amid growing pressure to release Gaetz report
Washington — The House Ethics Committee is set to meet Wednesday as it faces increasing pressure to release a potentially damaging report detailing its investigation into allegations former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz engaged in sexual misconduct and illicit drug use, two sources told CBS News.
The movements of the Ethics panel have been under heightened scrutiny since President-elect Donald Trump announced last week that he had selected Gaetz to serve as attorney general. The Florida Republican resigned his seat in the House in the wake of the announcement, which ended the Ethics Committee’s jurisdiction over Gaetz since he is now a former member.
The Ethics Committee declined to comment on the upcoming meeting. The panel was supposed to meet Friday to vote on releasing the report, but Trump tapped Gaetz for the nation’s top law enforcement officer days earlier. The committee then postponed its meeting.
Gaetz must win Senate confirmation to serve as attorney general, and senators have been calling to see the Ethics Committee’s report as they weigh whether to approve his nomination. Any confirmation hearings, which would be conducted by the Senate Judiciary Committee, would not take place until next year after Trump is inaugurated. Republicans will gain control of the upper chamber in the next Congress, which begins Jan. 3.
Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, told reporters last week that he believes senators should have access to the Ethics Committee’s findings.
“I think there should not be any limitations on the Senate Judiciary Committee’s investigation, including whatever the House Ethics Committee has generated,” said Cornyn, who sits on the Judiciary Committee.
GOP Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, a Trump ally, similarly told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that he believes the Senate should be able to see the report on Gaetz.
“Congress has to advise and consent, and Matt Gaetz is going to go through the same scrutiny as every other individual, and I’m going to give him a fair shot, just like every individual, and at the end of the day, the Senate has to confirm him,” he said.
But House Speaker Mike Johnson has cautioned against the release of the report by the Ethics Committee, warning in an interview Sunday that doing so for someone who is not a current House member “would be a Pandora’s box.”
“What I have said with regard to the report is that it should not come out. And why? Because Matt Gaetz resigned from Congress. He is no longer a member,” Johnson told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “There’s a very important protocol and tradition and rule that we maintain that the House Ethics Committee’s jurisdiction does not extend to non-members of Congress.”
The House Ethics Committee first began its investigation into allegations of misconduct against Gaetz in April 2021, but deferred its consideration in response to a request from the Justice Department. It resumed its investigation in May 2023 after federal investigators declined to charge Gaetz following their sex-trafficking and obstruction probe.
Gaetz has denied any wrongdoing and blamed the ethics probe on former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. He has called the investigation a “smear.” The Florida congressman helped lead the historic effort to strip McCarthy of the speaker’s gavel last year.
The ethics panel said in June that it had spoken with more than a dozen witnesses, issued 25 subpoenas and reviewed thousands of pages of documents as part of its investigation into Gaetz, and determined that “certain allegations merit continued review.”
The committee said it was examining accusations Gaetz engaged in sexual misconduct and illicit drug use, accepted improper gifts, gave “special privileges and favors” to people close to him and sought to obstruct government investigations into his conduct.
Multiple sources told CBS News at the time that four women told the Ethics Committee that they had been paid to go to parties, which Gaetz attended, that included sex and drugs. The panel has the Florida Republican’s Venmo transactions that allegedly show payments for the women. One woman who testified to the Ethics Committee said she had sex with Gaetz at a party in 2017, just after he was elected to Congress and when she was 17 years old, sources told CBS News at the time
Her lawyer, John Clune, said on social media last week that she was a high school student and “there were witnesses.”
“We would support the House Ethics Committee immediately releasing their report,” Clune wrote.