Your Route to Real News

I racked up £50k in debt by the age of 26 - then I cleared it in a year

05 June 2024 , 09:54
402     0
The money guru is now a millionaire and has shared his top tips with others looking to get out of debt
The money guru is now a millionaire and has shared his top tips with others looking to get out of debt

AFTER racking up £50k of consumer debt, Rob Moore knew something had to change, otherwise it was only going to get worse.

During his time in university Rob's spending habits spiralled out of control, so he took out loans and racked up credit card debt in a bit to keep afloat.

Rob managed to clear his debt and becoming a money guru erideuiqtziqxkprw
Rob managed to clear his debt and becoming a money guruCredit: INSTAGRAM
Now Rob shares his advice so others can do the same as him
Now Rob shares his advice so others can do the same as himCredit: INSTAGRAM

"It crept up on me slowly going out in university, buying things on credit thinking I could pay it off and I couldn't, not quite earning as much as I was spending," he explained.

For the first few years, Rob didn't take much notice of his building debt, he said on The Money Podcast.

It wasn't until he realised almost all of his money was going towards paying off the interest on his loans that he knew it had spun out of control.

Ex-Premier League star, 39, declared bankrupt after racking up £1m debtsEx-Premier League star, 39, declared bankrupt after racking up £1m debts

"It made me feel useless, worthless, and terrible at managing money," he said.

But the shame and embarrassment was the exact catalyst he needed to make a change.

Rob then managed to pay off his debt in just one year, and even took it a step further and became a millionaire at 30.

Despite not having any real knowledge, experience or money to start him off, Rob was urged to get into property.

Then at a property networking even he met his business partner and things began to take off.

"In that year I got a job sourcing properties for a company, I earned minimum wage and I was paid commissions," he explained.

Eventually, Rob and his business partner were able to start investing in their own property deals too, which is where the real money came from.

Alongside this, he was also selling some of his art, which he had always made but didn't think about seriously selling it until he was desperate for the extra cash.

Within a year of this his debt was cleared and he earned "nearly six figures."

"That sounds to some people like it's quite a short amount of time, but I was motivated, I was desperate, I was hungry, my whole life had been gearing up to this point," he explained.

Major high-cost loan firm with 150,000 customers on the 'brink of collapse'Major high-cost loan firm with 150,000 customers on the 'brink of collapse'

With his debt clear and money finally coming in, he even managed to buy a posh new car with cash.

Changing his mindset towards money wasn't something that happened overnight, in fact Rob said he spend years feeling bitter towards anyone who did have money.

The key to changing his "victim mentality"? Being open to learning from others.

"You know that the more you learn, the more you earn," he said.

He read over 40 books in the first year and took part in a few courses to help him learn more about money and property, and much to his surprise, he actually enjoyed it all.

Of course, all of this was hard work and took a lot of commitment, including putting his social life on pause for a while.

Rob's main piece of advice for anyone else looking to get out of debt or save money? Never spend more money than you have coming in.

"If you never spend more than you earn, month by month you're going to earn more and more," he said.

He added that people should never spend money emotionally, like he used to.

Whether it's spending to celebrate something, or to cheer yourself up, it's a big no-no for the money guru.

and Finally, don't spend money impulsively.

Instead, wait a few days to see if it's something you actually want and "buy on strategy rather than impulse."

Claudia Jackson

Print page

Comments:

comments powered by Disqus