Payday Loans: A Tax for People Who Are Bad at Math?

Some people really hate payday loans. Others just loathe them. Payday loans are, in a very limited number of circumstances, a viable method of last resort. They should never be your first choice.

Yet, some folks continue to take out payday loans, and sometimes to take them out week after week. They argue that the payday loan fee is relatively small, regardless of what the interest rate on the sheet of paper they signed says.

“So, what if the Annual Percentage Rate is 400 percent? I’m not borrowing for a year, just for 2 weeks” they say. Then, they wind up renewing the loan over and over again, sometimes for a year or more.

Let’s take a look at some of the basic math involved in a payday loan. Let’s say your lender wants to charge you $8 for each $100 you borrow. That’s not too bad, right? It’s actually very low – many payday lenders may charge as much as three times that amount. For argument’s sake, though, let’s stick with the $8 per $100 borrowed.

If you need $200 to get your car fixed, you’re going to pay the lender $16 to get you through until next payday. That doesn’t sound like a bad deal. Here’s the problem, though: chances are you didn’t budget $200 from that next paycheck to fix your car, either. So, you’ve got to cut back somewhere else (think Macaroni and Cheese for 2 weeks) or you’re going to have to renew the loan.

The majority of borrowers renew the loan for at least one more pay period. So, let’s say you do just that. Now, you’re at $32 in fees for that $200. It’s getting a little bit hefty, now. Now, you’re at or past what your bank would charge you if you’d have bounced a check.

So, come next payday, you decide that, no matter what, you’re paying part of the loan. So, you pay off $50 of it and renew the rest. Now, you’re up to $44 in fees. If you do the same thing for the next two pay periods, you will have had the loan for about 3 months and paid a total of almost $60 in fees.

The truth is that it takes most folks much longer to pay off their payday loans without renewing them, and by the time it is all said and done they’ve paid more in fees than the original loan amount. That’s just not a sound financial situation. Unless you’ve got no other recourse and it’s a matter of something that can’t wait, you should avoid taking a payday loan.

Leave Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *