I know the majority of South Africans are feeling the pinch in terms of inflation, lack of jobs, salary cuts, no increases, etc. and not assisted by further increases in fuel (and everything downstream) since the attack on Iran. So, just painting the picture of where I'm coming from as well before the real question...
...a few years back, both my wife and I were working. We could save and during holidays visit our family around the country. However, she was taking massive strain at work for the longest time from verbal abuse, being overworked with long hours she wasn't being paid extra for, until one day she couldn't and had a breakdown. She quit immediately. Although it wasn't the plan, we did have a conversation leading up to that point on what would happen if she did have to quit. At that time, things were reasonably good and we could afford to live off a single salary. Fast-forward 3 years, and with only 1 year of increase and a bonus, along with the rising costs of everything, that's no longer possible.
During that period, my wife took a year off, even from her extra-mural activities. She picked this up again the year after, and became a qualified instructor in that field end of last year, which she was gearing up to use as a business venture with a friend this year. Things are progressing, although the current payment is just off-setting fees and travelling. No issues, though. As a result, she's also started working at night and currently still in a 6-month probation phase. Things are slowly moving forward at least.
The issue we have currently, is that towards the end of last year, we took on additional debt due to unforeseen reasons, which was on top of the slow decline from my salary to not be able to afford our previous lifestyle and having to cut quite a bit here and there. The issue I have, while we're making small in-roads into this payment, at the current rate, I expect to be paid off only in 12-18 months - that's provided nothing else major pops up until then, which tends to happen. This isn't including standard annual grudge payments like renewing car licences, taking the cars for service, new tyres (one car needs this), etc.
While we are paying this off slowly, the interest on that debt fluctuates between R2,500 and R3,000pm depending on how much we were able to put into it that month. This amount is what's worrying me and continues to eat into our monthly funds available. This is why I'm looking at dipping into the tax-free savings and withdrawing the "savings portion" (the monthly payments were added to a Discovery account) to pay off 3/4 of the debt and then having it be paid off in the next 3-4 months instead.
Initially, I waited a bit longer to see what would happen with my company's annual results and increase announcements, but I received the news that I was one of the selected (nearly half the company) to receive a blanket "not-met" on their performance review, despite it having been marked as met on submission. This can be a whole separate rant on its own. So without that increase, and possible bonus, I don't have any other option to take a big chunk out of the debt other than to pay it off over the next 18 months to 2 years, or take from the tax-free savings and get it done sooner and not waste monthly on interests and repayment fees.
I understand that I won't be able to add the amounts back into that pot without incurring the additional taxes on any interests, as per SARS rules, but looking at the term, I'd have maximimised my R500k contribution threshold in the next 5-6 years, after which I'll then be subject to this anyways. I do also have retirement fund through my work, so this is over-and-above that already.
Are there better alternatives or suggestions to paying off the debt, or is using the funds available from the tax-free account a viable option?
Apologies, didn't expect this to be to long. TL;DR - Should I use the savings portion of my tax-free account to pay off 3/4 of debt I accumulated and minimise the R2,500-R3,000pm interest being charged, or should I just pay this over the 18-24 month period of my current rate of paying into the debt?