Responsible Debt Management

Debt Consolidation Loans: Yes or No?

A multitude of small monthly payments can add up to very big trouble. Before you know how it happened, you can suddenly have more payments going out than you have income coming in every month.

You aren't alone. It happens to a lot of people.

On the upside of debt consolidation loans, all debt is included. In debt management agreements, only unsecured debt is considered (credit cards). But in a debt consolidation loan, all debt is considered...secured debt as well as unsecured debt.

On the downside of debt consolidation loans, these loans are almost always second mortgages. In a nutshell...you really are betting the farm (the house) that you can meet the monthly payments every month until the consolidation loan is paid off.

With debt management agreements, even if it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, this is still unsecured debt. Courts can set it aside. When you make a debt consolidation loan in the form of a second mortgage, this debt that was once unsecured now becomes secured. If it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, your home can be foreclosed upon to satisfy debtors.

This point should not be taken lightly. Your home and the equity that you are establishing in it is your largest single asset. The mortgage on your home is usually also your largest monthly payment.

The low monthly payment that is promised with a debt consolidation loan is not always because the interest rate is lower. Sometimes it is because the debt payments have been extended for many additional years instead. Second mortgages can be as long as 30 years, and remember that you have bet the house that you could make every single one of those payments in full and on time.

See Also:
Paying Off $90000 in Debt in Two Years - Debt Freedom

Debt Consolidation Loans-Yes or No

Debt Management Debt Collectors

The Fair Debts Collection Practices Act sets guidelines about what debt collectors can and cannot do. You need to know the rules so you know when they have been broken.

If you have the unfortunate opportunity to deal with a debt collector, you need to know what your rights are and know the best and most effective way of dealing with one.

Debt collectors can call you on your home phone during business hours. They can call you until you tell them, in writing, to stop. Once you have given them written instructions to stop calling you, that does not erase the debt, but it will stop the phone calls.

Debt collectors cannot threaten you with bodily harm. They cannot misrepresent themselves as being associated with the government or with a credit reporting agency.

If you must deal with a debt collector, never assume that they will play fair or that they have your best interests at heart. They won't, and they don't.

Do not ever send post-dated checks, and never give a debt collector the right to draft payments from your bank account. These things can end up costing you more money and more trouble than you already have.

When you are negotiating with a debt collector, remember that you are dealing with a person who has been well schooled in the art of negotiation. They know more about it than you do.

Never give a debt collector personal information like where you work, what your income is, or your bank account information. They do not have the right to even ask you these questions. If they do, and you let them know that you are informed about the law, it will strengthen your position.

Nothing that you do when you are dealing with a debt collector will erase the debt. But knowing the law, and knowing what to say and what not to say, can keep you from more grief.

 


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Debt Management and Credit Cards

Debt Management: Getting the Picture

We all have albums (or shoeboxes) filled with photographs. They collectively make up the story of our lives. Photographs are little moments frozen in time that we can look at and recall whole days, weeks, or months of the good times of our lives.

I say good times because we don't take pictures of the bad times. We all enjoy going through those photographs and revisiting happy times of the past.

If we could take snapshots of our financial lives in the same way that we take snapshots of friends, relatives, and the happy moments in our lives, maybe it would help us to remember financial good times as well. It would be nice to remember what we did that was right so that we could avoid making mistakes today and tomorrow, wouldn't it?

If you could look at a photograph of your checkbook that was taken BCC (Before Credit Cards), you would see a balance that you felt so good about. Maybe it wasn't a really big balance, but it was a balance, nevertheless, and it was there after you had paid every debt that you owed. You had money left over...remember that?

It would be nice to see a picture of your savings account, too.

You can make new memories of positive checking account balances and savings account balances once you get control of your out-of-control debts. The way to do that is to just bite the bullet, so to speak, and seek professional help.

Choose a consumer credit counselor and let him or her help you to get your financial life back on the right track so that you can again experience the good financial times that you once had. There isn't a shortcut, and the trip back may not be painless, but it can be accomplished.

 

Related Topics: Singing the Debt Management Blues,  Comparing Debt Managements Services, American Version of Debt Management


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