[quote name='mzbagel']First a couple questions to help figure out where you stand:
1. What is your and your fiancee's age range?
2. Wubb mentioned this. Have you considered refinancing the car? You may be able to get a much better rate (~5.9% by refinancing). If you're really good at keeping up with financing (payments and such) you can try floating your loan with a 0% balance transfer to a credit card. However, you have to make sure to keep up with on time payments so you don't get burned. Otherwise pay that sucker off as fast as possible.
3. Do you or fiancee have any credit card debt that you're carrying month to month?
4. Does your fiancee get company match for 401k? If so, see about having the minimum amount put in to get full company match.
5. Can you break down your monthly earnings and expenses? Seeing where your money goes and how much is left can help you put together a plan.
Stay FAR FAR away from stocks unless you know what you're doing. Most advisers are going to try to sell you on buying funds/stocks through them for exorbitant fees. Check into using Vanguard, Fidelity or some other brokerage to do your trades. Consider investing into no-load/low fee mutual funds. It's all about risk/reward. Mutual funds help spread the risk although they provide less of a reward. If you're thinking long-term investment, they're great option since you don't have to actively manage them like you may need to do with stocks.
Read some of the books mentioned earlier in this thread. Figure out what your goals are. Decide what level of risk you'll accept with your investments and then make your plan.
You've already started on the right path to savings by living frugally. Here's what I've done with my wife to assure our future:
1) Max out my retirement contribution.
2) Automatically deduct money from paycheck into dedicated accounts for car payment, house payment, etc... ING is great for this since you can open multiple accounts under one login to manage your money. Other online banks do it too.
3) Automatically deduct money from paycheck into dedicated savings
4) Resist the temptation to splurge on yourself with your savings. Instead, find other ways to make some "fun money" by doing surveys, selling stuff you don't need, etc... Heck, turn a hobby into a money making business and work from "home".
5) To help cut down on entertainment expenses, we borrow movies from the library (free!)
edit: Beaten to the punch of some of these points, but hopefully they help

[/QUOTE]
1. My fiancee just turned 23 and im 25.
2. Didn't think we would be able to do much. Guess we should go to the credit union and talk to them? Regardless paying this off is our second priority.
3. We didnt till last month. My fiancee works at a car factory that gives all their employees 2 weeks off....problem is that since she was a temp it wasnt paid time off. So between the expenses of christmas, having 2 weeks with no pay and $300 we had already had on the card from a medical emergency we have about $400 on one card and $800 on another. We plan on paying this off immediately and outside that we dont keep money on the card. We charge everything we buy to the card then pay it off at the end of the month to build credit.
4. If she gets hired in I believe she will....again though shes just a temp at the moment.
5. Outgoing expenses
-------------------------------------
$81 Health Insurance(should drop in about half next month since fiancee can now buy into the temp agency insurance)
$30 UofM for health emergency last year($250 left on total bill)
$50 a month to local hospital for health emergency several months ago(freaking $1,500 left on this)
$60-$80 a month to energy company(proud of myself for this one, neighbors pay $110-$150!)
$80 a month for our 2 cell phones
$100 for car insurance
$180 Car loan(again somewhere in the area of $5.5 k left on this loan and I belive about 8% interest)
$360 a month rent
$50 for cable internet
$20 for netflix
$15 for one credit card $30 for the other(though again we pay the most we can afford every month) owe about $1.3k I believe.
Earnings
------------------------------------------------------
Her earnings a month were about $250 a check....however she just got an extra 10-15 hours a week and a $4 an hour raise. We are hoping that after taxes this is going to equal out to an extra $750 a month.....but we need to wait to next week to make sure that her temp agency doesnt take an extra cut of her increase(they currently take $2 an hour from her so even though she made $12 it was like making $10)and that I figured tax info right. Again that means that my $630 was paying our bills or atleast most of them. Her money payed for gas for the car($30-$70 a month cept for holdidays and other events)and the rent. And we had $300-$600 left over a month depending on events and what not...we received food stamps but now that we are doing better I might get rid of those or will after we pay off our debt. Not ashamed to receive em, but if we dont need em so badly doesnt seem right taking them.
Two quick questions. What exactly is a mutual fund? Second where is the best place to go about the IRA? We were just going to go to our credit union(we received a flyer from them about IRAs the other day)because I thought all IRAs were the same.....but now reading at this site and yahoo answers were I posed the question, as well as from my own research im seeing all sorts of different IRAs listed.