28 May 2025 | 2 - 3 MIN read
Let’s play a quick game.
Think back to last Tuesday.
What did you eat for dinner?
Can’t remember? That’s okay, most of us can’t. But here’s the twist: that tiny purchase might still be costing you, not just in rands, but in stress.
This is what we call The Small Swipe Trap.
It’s not the big splurges that sink us, it’s the quiet, everyday swipes. The ones we forget before we’ve even finished paying them off. In this blog, we’re unpacking how these seemingly harmless habits build up, how they silently keep us stuck in debt, and what you can do to stop the cycle.
This is what we call unconscious debt. It’s not a big purchase you’ve planned for — like a car, or a study loan. It’s the quiet, forgettable swipes. The ones that feel harmless. But here’s the thing: credit is not free. And small swipes have a long tail.
Over time, those small amounts accumulate interest. That R120.00 lunch? If you’re only making minimum payments, you could still be paying for that meal 6 months down the line.
We often hear people say “I don’t know where my money goes” and this is where. Into silent interest repayments, often on things that were never meant to last.
A gym App. Two streaming services. That R89.00-a-month beauty box. They don’t feel like debt, but if they’re on a credit card, they are.
Many of us sign up for subscriptions on autopilot and forget they exist. Then we pay interest on them for months. Maybe even years.
The solution?
Making the minimum payment on your credit card feels responsible, but it’s not enough. In fact, banks love it when you only pay the minimum. Why? Because it maximises how much interest they can charge you over time.
If your minimum payment is R300.00 but your balance is R2 500.00, you could be in debt for over a year - on one purchase.
The fix?
It’s the 26th. Groceries are running low. Airtime’s gone. And your bank balance is gasping. So you swipe. You make it through. You think: “I’ll pay it back when I get paid.”
But here’s the trap: when your salary hits, the credit repayments eat into it immediately. So, you swipe again at the end of the next month. And the cycle continues.
The solution?
Here’s the truth: most of us are not bad with money. We’re just busy. We’re distracted. We’re keeping up with expectations ~ our own, our peers’, our families’. And we’re tired. So, we swipe. We scroll. We order. We pay later.
But understanding your own patterns is the first step to shifting them.
Here’s 5 small actions that can make a big difference:
For one week, note every time you swipe for under R250.00. Just becoming aware will change how you spend.
If you’re using credit for anything that will be gone in 24 hours (like food, drinks, or impulse buys), pause and ask: Would I still buy this if I had to pay double?
If your income increased recently, great! Now decide: what do I want this raise to change in my life? Let part of it go towards saving, investing or settling debt, before your lifestyle absorbs all of it.
Are there recurring purchases you could replace, reduce or reframe? (We KNOW some of you will be surprised…).
Even R500.00 a month into a separate account can help reduce the pressure to swipe when the end of the month hits. It’s like an emergency fund for your Uber Eats habit.
The real cost of unconscious spending isn’t just financial, it’s emotional too. It’s the anxiety. The mental load. The “I thought I’d be further by now” feeling.
You’re not behind. You’re not failing.
But you do deserve better habits — and the freedom they create.
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