Never Let Your Credit Card Balance Exceed Your Net Worth. Ever.
This one rule has kept me financially free for over a decade.
I have a rule that governs my entire financial life:
My net worth must always be greater than any debt I carry.
Always. No exceptions.
If I have a credit card balance, I have assets that could wipe it out instantly. If I have a loan, I have a net worth that dwarfs it. If I owe money anywhere, I could eliminate that debt within seconds if I needed to.
This isn't about being debt-free. It's about never being trapped.
The Rule Is Simple
Here it is in plain terms:
Your credit card balance should never exceed your net worth.
If your net worth is $50,000, you should never carry more than $50,000 in credit card debt. Ideally, not even close.
If your net worth is $10,000, a $15,000 credit card balance means you're underwater. You owe more than you're worth. That's a dangerous place to be.
If your net worth is negative - meaning your debts already exceed your assets - every additional dollar of credit card debt is digging the hole deeper.
The math should always work in your favor:
Net worth > Total debt
If that equation ever flips, you've lost control.
Why This Rule Matters
Most people think about debt in terms of monthly payments.
"Can I afford the minimum payment?"
That's the wrong question. That's how people stay trapped for decades.
The right question is: Could I eliminate this debt right now if I had to?
Not "will I" - "could I."
When the answer is yes, debt becomes a tool. You're choosing to carry it because it makes strategic sense, not because you're stuck.
When the answer is no, debt becomes a cage. You're not using credit - credit is using you.
The Psychological Shift
Here's what changes when you follow this rule:
You stop being afraid of your debt.
When your net worth exceeds your debt, you're not worried about credit card balances.
You're not stressed about what you owe. You know - at any moment - you could clear it if you wanted to.
That's not financial recklessness. That's financial freedom.
You make better decisions.
When you know you can't let your balance exceed your net worth, you naturally spend differently. You don't put things on credit that you can't back up with assets. You don't dig holes you can't climb out of.
The rule creates a ceiling that protects you from yourself.
You maintain leverage in life.
Debt without assets is desperation. You have no options. You take jobs you hate. You stay in situations that don't serve you. You make fear-based decisions.
Debt with assets is leverage. You have choices. You can walk away. You can pivot. You can say no.
The difference between those two lives is this one rule.
How I Actually Apply This
Let me be specific about how this works in my life:
Credit cards: I use credit cards for everything - the points, the protection, the convenience. But I never carry a balance I couldn't pay off immediately from my liquid assets. If my checking and savings accounts couldn't cover the balance tomorrow, I've overextended.
Larger debts: If I take on debt for something strategic - a business investment, real estate, whatever - I make sure my overall net worth still exceeds my total debt. I'm never in a position where I owe more than I'm worth.
The gut check: Before any major purchase on credit, I ask myself: "Does this violate the rule?" If yes, I don't do it. Simple.
The Exception People Try to Make
"But what about a mortgage? That's debt that exceeds most people's liquid net worth."
Fair question.
Here's how I think about it:
A mortgage is secured by an asset - the house. If you have a $400,000 mortgage but the house is worth $450,000, your net position on that debt is potentially positive - depending on post sale what's left. You might have ~$50,000 in equity.
The rule still applies - just factor in the asset value.
What I'm really talking about is unsecured debt - credit cards, personal loans, consumer debt - that isn't backed by an appreciating asset.
That kind of debt should never exceed your net worth. Period.
What Happens When People Break This Rule
I've watched people break this rule. Here's how it goes:
Stage 1: "It's temporary."
They put something on a credit card they can't really afford. They tell themselves they'll pay it off next month. Next month comes, they don't.
Stage 2: The balance grows.
Minimum payments. Interest accumulating. The balance creeps up. Still feels manageable because they're not looking at the big picture.
Stage 3: Net worth goes negative.
One day they do the math and realize they owe more than they own. Panic sets in. But instead of stopping, they often dig deeper - because what's another $500 when you're already $20,000 underwater?
Stage 4: Trapped.
Now they can't leave the job they hate. Can't take a risk on a new opportunity. Can't say no to things that drain them. Every decision is made from a place of financial fear.
This is what the rule prevents.
If you never let your credit card balance exceed your net worth, you never end up trapped. You always have a way out.
What People Don't Understand:
The real flex isn't what you spend. It's what you could pay off.
Anyone can swipe a credit card. That's not impressive. That's easy.
What's impressive is knowing - at any moment - you could clear every balance you carry. That your assets exceed your liabilities. That you're choosing to carry debt, not forced to.
That's financial strength. And it starts with this rule.
How to Get Back on Track If You've Broken It
If your credit card balance currently exceeds your net worth, here's the path back:
Step 1: Stop the bleeding.
No new debt. None. Cut the cards if you have to. Until your net worth exceeds your debt, you're not adding to the problem.
Step 2: Attack the balance.
Every extra dollar goes to paying down the debt. Not minimum payments - aggressive payments. This is an emergency.
Step 3: Build assets simultaneously.
While paying down debt, also build your net worth. Even small amounts into savings or investments. You need both numbers moving in the right direction.
Step 4: Create the buffer.
Once your net worth exceeds your debt, don't stop. Build a buffer. You want your net worth to be significantly higher than any debt you carry - not just barely above it.
Step 5: Never go back.
Once you've experienced the freedom of net worth exceeding debt, protect it. The rule becomes non-negotiable.
I've Followed This Rule for Over A Decade
It's not complicated. It's not sexy. It doesn't require fancy spreadsheets or complex strategies.
Your credit card balance should never exceed your net worth.
That's it.
Follow this rule, and you'll never be financially trapped. You'll always have options. You'll make decisions from a place of power, not desperation.
Break this rule, and you're one bad month away from losing control of your life.
The math is simple. The discipline is hard.
But freedom is worth it.
Investing is the EXIT.
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Today's FL10 Workout: Monday Blues
10 min · No gym · No equipment · 2 min each
Bear Crawl - Hands and feet on the floor, knees hovering. Crawl forward and back. Stay low.
Frog Jumps - Deep squat, hands touch the floor, explode forward. Reset. Repeat.
Tricep Dips - Hands on a chair behind you, lower your body by bending your elbows, press back up.
Speed Skaters - Jump side to side landing on one foot, opposite leg sweeps behind. Stay quick.
Superman Hold - Lie face down, lift arms and legs off the floor, squeeze your back. Hold and breathe.
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Originally published at destinyh.com on March 2, 2026.
This article is for informational purposes only. It should not be considered financial or legal advice. Consult a financial professional before making any significant financial decisions.
About the Creator
Destiny S. Harris
Writing since 11. Investing and Lifting since 14.
destinyh.com



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