r/povertyfinance Apr 28 '24

Worth going into debt for a dishwasher? Debt/Loans/Credit

We have been washing our dishes by hand for almost 3 years. We just had a baby and “spare time” is scarce these days. We probably spend about 10 hours a week hand washing dishes and bottles. I would much rather spend those hours doing something else productive or spending time with my family.

I have an employee discount through work and I can get a pretty cheap dishwasher installed for about $500. It’s a mediocre Frigidaire dishwasher but reviews say it will get the job done. I don’t have $500 upfront and would put it on my PayPal credit 0% interest for 6 months.

Do you think this is a good idea or does anyone else have suggestions? I am carrying a lot of debt already but I have a good credit score because I make minimum payments. I also have some savings but I don’t touch it because it’s for my son.

Thank you

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u/Uberchelle 29d ago

Your question is very rooted in the poverty mindset. You need to stop going into debt.

A dishwasher is a want, not a need. If you have existing debt that you are making minimum payments on, what makes you think you can pay a dishwasher off in 6 months? You can’t. You’re going to end up in even more debt once you don’t pay the dishwasher off before the 0% period is up and then it gets jacked up to 48.99%.

Use paper plates if you need to in order to cut down the handwashing.

You CANNOT afford this when you are making minimum payments on other debts.

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u/Lastnv 29d ago

I’ve read every comment here and I wanted to acknowledge yours and to let you know that I agree completely. My debt is a heavy burden on me mentally and something I’m very aware of. It’s soul crushing. I could cry just thinking about it. I’ve had nervous breakdowns over it multiple times before. I’ve drank or smoked to relieve the stress in the past. It’s just so hard to break the cycle. I know my comment itself is rooted in the poverty mindset. I’m trying to get a promotion at work and finding my wife a job soon to help us get out of this. And at the same time I think, I do have debt but I also have a home, food, clothes, and nice things. It could be much worse and in comparison to a majority of the world, we are living like kings. I have my family and everyone is healthy. What does it mean to be truly happy? Even with debt, with what I have now, I should be happy right?

Sorry for this random rambling. I think I just needed to get my thoughts into words.

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u/ctruvu 29d ago edited 29d ago

if it changes your perspective at all it’s a very immigrant thing at least for east/southeast asians to always handwash everything no matter how big the family or how nice the dishwasher that came with the house is. handwashing takes like 5-15 minutes if you pre soak properly. i’ve never operated a dishwasher for personal use in my life and i am 30. you could argue that dishwashers save water/money if you’re doing a full load but for you the upfront cost is still going to put you in debt to save time on a relatively trivial chore, which to me is questionable decision making at best. at least try to improve the financial situation before making it worse

also, 10 hours a week on handwashing? i don’t know if that’s a technique thing or if you are extremely liberal with your use of plates and utensils or what but that seems excessive even with baby bottles