I must have missed something - wasn't he just getting ready to move back in? Glad you are rid of that situation!!
Yes, I had agreed that he could move in for March and April, provided his share of bills were paid, and if he got a job we could talk about him continuing being here. His dad agreed to pay his bills for the two months to give him a chance to look for a job. He was here for 1 week (and I actually met him outside the door and refused to unlock it and let him in until he had given me the money his dad sent) when he decided it would be more "fun" to ride with a different friend as an over-the-road trucker-passenger. So, he left earlier this week. I reminded him that if he left for the 4 weeks on the road, it was not likely that 1) his dad would send money for April, and 2) without the bill money he was not welcome back. He said that was fine; I said good riddance.
I've been thinking about the same dilemma. I went through all my cc's and made a list of when the ones with 0% offers end and what % they will then go up to. Then I compared them to my cc's that already charge interest. That helped me to make a priority list for which ones I focus on first, second and so on.
Just reread your post and if I understand the note in bold above, you are already making payments that will ensure those balances at 0% will be paid off before the 0% offer ends? In that case I would put the extra money toward your other cc if you are being charged interest on that balance.
Yes, I have 2 store credit cards with 0% promotional offers. One ends in September, and has a balance of about $250 where I'm paying $50 a month (should pay off in August), the other ends in January and has a balance of about $220 and I'm paying $20 a month (have not paid the March payment yet but will pay off in January before the end date of the promotion).
I'm pretty much thinking to put the extra toward the one cc with a balance. The extra is only about $50 a month, so it would still take me 3-4 months to pay off one of the others, and paying those early won't save me any interest; while paying down the one cc will save me interest.
On the other hand, I've done well with the 52 week challenge so far this year, but I can foresee it getting rougher in mid-summer, so being done with one of the other payments would help to continue building my emergency fund. But I really think that saving the interest charge is the better long term option.
----------------------------
My thought is that there is no advantage to paying off the 0% interest accounts early, since doing so doesn't save any interest, but my fear is that I will become complacent or comfortable carrying balances - and that was part of what got me "behind" to begin with. (I'm not behind in any payments, but I allowed myself to be convinced to continue to make several purchases because I could just pay it out, and the amount I was using to "pay down" my balances was still more than what the additional interest was. Until I realized that I needed new tires on my car, and didn't have any savings or enough balance on any card to pay for them. That was my wake-up call that I was slipping into a debt nightmare.)