A three-session credit literacy program for workers managing multiple installments. You bring your own contracts — credit cards, personal loans, appliance payments — and learn to decode exactly what you signed.
Decode your contracts: nominal vs. effective rate, hidden fees, and how to find the real cost of credit.
Learn to calculate exactly how much you pay in interest across all your active installments.
Organize your debts strategically — which to pay first, and whether early cancellation makes sense.
Many workers in Paraguay are paying multiple credit obligations simultaneously without knowing the total real cost. This program gives you the tools to see the full picture.
Financial contracts are written in technical language designed for institutions, not for the people who sign them. In this program, you bring your actual contracts — credit card agreements, personal loan documents, appliance installment papers — and we work through them together, line by line.
Every exercise uses your real contracts. Not hypothetical examples — your actual obligations, so what you learn applies directly to your situation.
Discover the difference between the rate advertised and what you actually pay — including fees, insurance, and compounding effects.
Leave with a clear, personalized order for addressing your obligations — based on real cost, not just balance size.
Understand when paying off a debt early actually saves money — and when it doesn't, depending on your contract terms.
Each session builds on the previous one, moving from understanding your contracts to calculating your real costs to planning your way forward.
We go through the anatomy of a credit contract. You'll identify where the real interest rate hides, what all those abbreviations mean, and which clauses affect how much you ultimately pay.
Using your own contracts, you calculate the total amount you will have paid by the end of each obligation — and compare it to the original amount borrowed. The results are often surprising.
You organize all your active obligations by their real cost and build a prioritized payment strategy. We also analyze whether early cancellation of any obligation is financially worthwhile.
Important: Quvante is a financial education program. We do not renegotiate debts, contact creditors, or sell refinancing products. Our sole purpose is to help you understand the obligations you have already signed.
If you currently have two or three installment payments running at the same time — and you're not entirely sure how much you're paying in interest, how much remains, or whether it makes sense to cancel early — this program was designed for you.
Understand your statement, minimum payment traps, and the real cost of revolving credit.
Decode your amortization schedule and understand what portion of each payment goes to interest vs. principal.
Find out the effective annual rate embedded in store financing and compare it to alternatives.
Sessions are conducted in small groups so each participant gets time to work through their own contracts. Complete the contact form to register your interest and we'll be in touch with available dates.
Register NowNot sure what you're actually paying? Use our free online calculator to get a preliminary look at the difference between nominal and effective annual interest rates on any loan.
Open CalculatorAfter completing the program, each participant leaves with practical knowledge they can apply immediately to their own financial situation.
You'll know exactly how much you're paying in interest across all your active obligations — not an estimate, but the actual figure derived from your contracts.
The difference between nominal annual rate and effective annual rate becomes clear — and you'll know how to identify which one applies to any contract you encounter in the future.
A prioritized, written plan for managing your current obligations based on real cost analysis.
The ability to evaluate whether early cancellation of any specific debt is financially advantageous given your contract terms.
Skills to read and evaluate any future credit contract before signing — so you can make informed decisions going forward.