Pigly, a free personal finance site, has other calculators and other money articles, too. There’s a student debt calculator, and Pigly has some articles with realistic student debt advice. I also like NerdWallet’s guide to paying off student loans, both because they’re more about reasonable and applicable ways to pay down debt. I haven’t yet found the calculator that explains how to pay off tens of thousands in student debt if you make $20K or $30K year, but let me know if you find one. This infuriating Forbes article, about that couple who got a free condo and years of free rent, is meant to be an inspiring story about paying off extremely high student debt. For most of us, we’re not getting a free condo from relatives, and if we did, it wouldn’t become a rental income while we lived somewhere else, also free. Ugh. It’s nice to find reasonable suggestions about student debt, instead.
So, I definitely don’t want to sound like canceling Netflix or skipping a Starbucks is magic. But carefully watching spending can help us find where we can trim a little bit. Abby’s blog, IPickUpPennies, regularly records her spending diaries, and explains her budget in detail. (I started reading Abby’s blog for personal finance advice in 2008, you know, in the last once-in-a-lifetime recession.) Carefully tracking spending, especially with a finance calculator to help, can be good for all of our finances in covid times. And keeping a careful eye on any debt is a good plan any time.