{"id":2429,"date":"2024-04-28T17:33:07","date_gmt":"2024-04-28T07:33:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/?p=2429"},"modified":"2026-04-14T11:07:27","modified_gmt":"2026-04-14T01:07:27","slug":"smart-money-moves-for-2024-clear-your-debts-and-grow-your-wealth","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/uk\/2024\/04\/28\/smart-money-moves-for-2024-clear-your-debts-and-grow-your-wealth\/","title":{"rendered":"Smart Money Moves for 2024: Clear Your Debts and Grow Your Wealth"},"content":{"rendered":"

If you’ve started 2024 feeling financially squeezed, you’re far from alone. Stubborn inflation, elevated interest rates, and the relentless creep of everyday costs have left millions of UK households juggling competing priorities: clearing debt, building savings, and somehow still paying the bills. The good news is that a handful of disciplined, well-sequenced moves can dramatically change your trajectory over the next twelve months. The bad news? Most of the breezy “money hacks” doing the rounds online skip the hard parts. This article won’t.<\/p>\n

Face Your Debts Before You Do Anything Else<\/h3>\n

No savings strategy, cashback scheme, or budgeting app will outrun the compound cost of high-interest debt. A typical UK credit card charges around 22\u201325% APR. Your best instant-access savings account pays perhaps 5%. The maths is brutal: every pound sitting in savings while you carry a credit card balance is losing<\/em> you roughly 18p a year in real terms. Clear the expensive debt first \u2014 always.<\/p>\n

List every debt you hold: credit cards, store cards, overdrafts, personal loans, car finance, buy-now-pay-later agreements. Note the outstanding balance, the interest rate, and the minimum payment. Then choose your attack strategy:<\/p>\n