| MSN Money Finance Tips |
| Save like the rich and famous In a down economy, how are the wealthy protecting their money? Let the same advice they are receiving guide you through these hazardous financial times. |
| Lessons of a $618,616 death Two years after her husband's death and almost 10 years after his cancer diagnosis, a woman examines the wrenching emotional and financial costs of keeping him alive. |
| Credit card debt: How to cut a deal More than ever, credit card companies are ready to negotiate with borrowers who are in over their heads. But know your options before you commit. |
| Does your car insurer hate you? Insurance companies won't randomly decide to drop you or raise your rates. But many things could put you on your insurer's bad side. |
| Time to dump the housing tax credit? Government support that artificially props up home values is forestalling a real recovery for the housing market. |
| Stuck with student loans for life? Your college debts may not be toxic, but making the wrong choice between federal and private loans can be a life-altering decision. Here's what to look out for. |
| Your 6 secret credit card perks You may not know you have them, but your card issuer provides free protections and services that could cost you hundreds of dollars elsewhere. |
| Free tax help is waiting for you There are numerous programs available to help taxpayers who qualify, including outlets for filing online. The big question: Why don't more people use them? |
| Uninsured? Where to get health care Depending on your medical needs, you have several levels of health care available, from relatively inexpensive retail clinics to lifesaving, but expensive, emergency rooms. |
| The student-loan morass: How to fix it Borrowing money to go to college is not the problem -- borrowing money at relatively high rates is. Private interests have given student loans a bad name. |
| Home sellers finally get real Listing prices are drawing increasingly closer to what the market will bear. As a consequence, buyers are facing a new reality of their own: Less bargaining power. |
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