Debt Free Charts are used for tracking your debt payoff progress or your savings goals.
Printing your charts:
I recommend that you print your chart on cardstock, especially if you plan to use ink pens to color in your chart.
A laser printer gives the best results if you plan to use ink pens on your chart. If you use an inkjet printer, pencils or crayons might give a better result.
Most Classic Charts come with both the black background and outline versions. Select which one you want to print in your print setup. If you got a chart that doesn't have the Outline version in the file, go back to the product and select the Outline version in the drop down menu before checking out.
Filling in your numbers:
You can put $0 at either the top or the bottom of the chart. Usually $0 goes at the bottom for savings charts, but for debts, you could go either way, depending on if you want to see the total you've paid off ($0 at the bottom), or how much you still have left to pay off ($0 at the top). Either way, put $0 at one end, and the total $$ at the other end. Then divide your total by the number of lines to fill in (most charts have 25, some have 20), that gives you your base number, and enter that on the first short line next to $0. Then fill in the rest of the amounts toward your total, adding your base number each time.
>> Try the handy DFC Calculator <<
For example, if your total debt is $10,000, and you enter that at the top, you then enter $400 (10,000/25=400) on the short line above the $0, $800 on the next short line up, then $1200 and so on.
Coloring in your chart:
Each time you make a payment, or add to your savings, fill in the chart with a colored marker. I like to use one color per month, so I can see at a glance how I'm doing.
Color to the current balance.
Notice in the sample image that you don't have to fill in a whole line each time. If each line represents $200, and you have saved or paid another $100, then just fill in a line half way up.
For the new Game Style charts the method is similar. Divide your total debt by the number of spaces (100 for the Debt Free Land and Game of Loans charts, 200 for Debtris) and that is how much each space represents.
Use a little simple math to get the amounts at the 25%, 50% and 75% markers.
You can write little numbers inside each space, as you do for the lines on the original style charts, if you like, or you can just divide how much your debt balance has gone down by the amount each of the spaces represents. So if your balance goes down by $250, and each space on the chart represents $125, color in two spaces.
Dealing with Interest:
On debt payoff charts, track the current balance, not your payments.
So if I owed $2000, made a $200 payment, but that only knocked $150 off the total because of interest, then I colored my chart to the $1850 mark.
Simply wait for your payment to post, and when it does, check your new balance. That is what you color to on your chart.
If it is for savings charts, I just ignored the interest since it's so small, treating it like a little bonus at the end.
Don't throw them away!
When you complete a chart (WoooHooo!), you can either keep it in your debt free journal, or you can laminate and display it near your next chart so you can see all the progress you've made since beginning your debt free journey.
Please let me know how the charts are working for you, and where you have them posted. I'd love to hear from you, really!
Hello, I love the charts, it makes debt paying fun so to speak, lol, was just wondering if you still had the candy land type chart for student loan, like u have for credit cards, if so I would love to have it
New to this and curious about the interest. How do you calculate how much you’ve paid off not including interest? For example of I have a $200 current debt, at an interest rate of 5%, and I make a $50 payment. Is it just that 95% of the payment is what you track or is it more complicated? Explain it like I’m five, I stink at math.
Just downloaded and filled out our chart! Already have it hanging next to the fridge where we’ll see it every day. Thank you for motivating us to stay on track. After seeing the printable my husband was so pumped and said “let’s do this”
When using the credit card sheet, if you have multiple credit cards, do you use one sheet for each credit card or one sheet for all of them combined?
Thank you for offering these for free! They are exciting and helpful and this is very generous of you