Family Debt Readiness Quiz
Answer seven questions to identify the strongest next step for your household.
Your readiness result
What “ready to accelerate debt payoff” means
A family is ready to accelerate when required bills are current, the monthly budget has a repeatable surplus, and an ordinary surprise is unlikely to go straight back onto a credit card. Readiness is not the same as being debt-free or having a perfect emergency fund. It means the household can increase payments without destabilizing rent, food, utilities, transportation, insurance, or childcare.
Three readiness levels
Stabilize first
Use this stage when bills are late, checking frequently reaches zero, or the family relies on cards for groceries. Keep minimums current where possible, contact creditors before missing payments, remove nonessential recurring charges, and build the first small cash buffer.
Build the base
Use this stage when the budget is positive but reserves are thin. Divide the monthly surplus between a starter emergency fund and one selected debt. This may feel slower, but it reduces the chance that the next repair or school expense erases progress.
Accelerate strategically
Use this stage when the family has stable cash flow and a protected reserve. Compare avalanche and snowball approaches, automate the chosen extra payment, and send windfalls according to a written rule rather than deciding in the moment.
Questions to discuss as a household
- Which expenses are essential for work and family stability?
- What amount can we pay every month even during an expensive month?
- Which debt creates the most stress or costs the most interest?
- How much cash would prevent us from using a card for the next common emergency?
- When will we review the plan together?
Use the quiz result as a conversation starter, then confirm the plan with the detailed recovery scorecard and the family financial recovery plan.