Debt Management
Is Debt Consolidation Worth It? A Malaysian Case Study
Follow Aisyah's real-world journey from RM45,000 in credit card debt across 3 cards to a single, affordable consolidation loan.
Debt consolidation sounds great in theory, but does it actually save money in practice? Let's walk through a realistic Malaysian case study to find out.
Meet Aisyah
Aisyah, 32, works as a government administrative officer in Putrajaya. Her gross salary is RM4,200/month. Over the past four years, spending on home renovations, a family emergency, and everyday expenses accumulated across three credit cards:
| Card | Bank | Balance | Interest Rate | Minimum Payment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa Gold | Maybank | RM18,000 | 18% p.a. | RM900 |
| Mastercard | CIMB | RM15,000 | 17.5% p.a. | RM750 |
| Visa Classic | Public Bank | RM12,000 | 15% p.a. | RM600 |
| Total | RM45,000 | Avg ~17% | RM2,250 |
Aisyah's combined minimum payments eat up 54% of her gross salary — well above the recommended 30% debt-service ratio. She's treading water.
The Before Picture: Paying Minimums Only
If Aisyah pays only the minimums and they decrease as balances drop:
- Time to clear all 3 cards: approximately 11 years
- Total interest paid: roughly RM38,500
- Total amount paid: approximately RM83,500 on RM45,000 of debt
- Monthly stress: managing 3 different due dates, 3 different banks
The Consolidation Option
Aisyah applies for a personal loan through her bank's debt consolidation programme:
- Loan amount: RM45,000
- Interest rate: 5.5% flat per annum
- Tenure: 5 years (60 months)
- Monthly instalment: RM956
After approval, the bank pays off all three credit cards directly. Aisyah now has one payment, one due date, and one interest rate.
The After Picture
| Metric | Before (Minimums) | After (Consolidation) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment | RM2,250 (decreasing) | RM956 (fixed) |
| Time to debt-free | ~11 years | 5 years exactly |
| Total interest | ~RM38,500 | RM12,375 |
| Total paid | ~RM83,500 | RM57,375 |
| Interest saved | ~RM26,125 |
Cash Flow Impact
With the consolidation loan, Aisyah frees up roughly RM1,294 per month (RM2,250 − RM956). She uses this to:
- Build a 3-month emergency fund of RM12,600 over 10 months
- Start contributing RM200/month to PRS (Private Retirement Scheme) for tax relief
- Keep RM294/month as breathing room for irregular expenses
The Catch: Discipline Is Non-Negotiable
Consolidation only works if Aisyah does not rack up new credit card debt. She froze two cards and kept one with a RM3,000 limit for genuine emergencies only. Without this step, consolidation can make things worse — you end up with the loan plus new card balances.
Next step: Run your own numbers — use the pinjamHub consolidation calculator to see your potential savings.
Exploring debt consolidation?
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