This Color of Money Book Club selection can help you deal with the mental barriers affecting your money.
Post columnist Michelle Singletary offers her advice and answers your questions.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau wants to hear about your dealings with debt collectors.
Kiplinger is offering military veterans one-day free access to its online retirement planning site.
If you already have drug coverage, you don’t have to pay a fee for joining Part D later.
You know it when it happens to you.
Post columnist Michelle Singletary offered her advice and answers your questions.
Attention to open enrollment is important because plans can change in their cost and benefits every year.
Couple wonders whether closing a few credit accounts will pose a problem when going after a car loan.
Here are some tips for working around the glitches of the health care Web site.
Post columnist Michelle Singletary offered her advice and answers your questions.
Pope Francis preaches humility over luxury. That should be a good example for other religious leaders.
Those dependent on government work seek advice on what to do in case their paychecks stop again.
Their 16-year-old car got towed to the impound lot. They wonder if it’s worth the expense to retrieve it.
Use these tips to outsmart your servicer if it’s making it difficult to pay in advance.
Post columnist Michelle Singletary offered her advice and answers your questions.
Yes, the stalemate over the shutdown and debt ceiling is finally over. Well, sort of.
Creating an emergency fund is a must, even for those working in jobs viewed as unemployment-proof.
The Color of Money columnist responds to furloughed workers’ concerns.
COLUMN | Wendell and Linda Ramage could give Congress and the Obama administration some lessons.
Michelle Singletary writes the nationally syndicated personal finance column, “The Color of Money,” which appears in The Post on Wednesday and Sunday. Her award-winning column is syndicated by The Washington Post Writer’s Group and is carried in more than 100 newspapers. In 2010, she released her third personal finance book, “The Power To Prosper: 21 Days to Financial Freedom.” She has been a personal finance contributor for MSNBC, NPR and ABC’s daily talk show, “The Revolution.” For two seasons she hosted “Singletary Says” on TV One. In her spare time, Singletary is the director of a ministry she founded at her church, in which women and men volunteer to mentor others who are having financial challenges. She is a graduate of the University of Maryland at College Park. She has received the Distinguished Alumni Award from The Johns Hopkins University, where she earned a master’s degree in business and management.