Showing posts with label monthly payments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monthly payments. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Article : Consumer credit counselors – How do they help you?

Consumer credit counselors – How do they help you?By Sandy Thomson, your credit counseling news source

Many people don’t know that consumer credit counseling can work as a substitute to filing bankruptcy. Expert credit counselors can educate you on various financial topics and offer debt counseling services after thoroughly assessing your financial condition.

Once you sign up for the services of a consumer credit counseling agency, your debt level would be evaluated by a professional credit counselor. Subsequently, a repayment plan is worked out on the basis of your income and debt level. They would negotiate with your creditors to reduce your interest rates and establish a debt management plan that would help you get out of debt.

How does consumer credit counseling work?

While setting up a debt management plan, your financial situation is comprehensively assessed by the credit counselors. Given below are the factors that are primarily taken into consideration:

  • Number of credit accounts you have
  • The outstanding balances of those accounts
  • The interest rates
  • Minimum monthly payments
  • Delinquent accounts (if any)

The credit counselor also takes into account how much you earn each month and how much you spend. Taking all these factors into consideration, a debt management plan (DMP) is created to pay off your bills. Every one of your creditors receives this suggested plan for acceptance purposes.

As soon as they agree to the suggested debt management plan, you need to start making payments to the consumer credit counseling agency. As per the DMP, this payment is allocated to your creditors. When you enter a DMP, your credit accounts are usually frozen so that you don’t run up new balances.

Fees of consumer credit counseling services

A host of credit counseling agencies maintain that they’re nonprofit in nature. Even though an agency declares themselves to be nonprofit, you shouldn’t by any means assume that their services are free of cost. More often than not, their services are available to you against a fee. The initial payment made by you might be used to compensate for the fees. On the other hand, some debt management companies might ask for a flat fee which is deducted from your monthly payment. ...

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Link to a forum : "Advice on Debt Negotiation Service"

Last post: 10-30-2008

Opening post from this forum :
"
I have recently signed up with a company called Debt Negotiation Services. I am set to make monthly payments for 48 months. Recently I've had a creditor call me and say that one of the accounts have "charged-off". I'm starting to have second thoughts about the service . I have read on CreditInfocenter.com that (most) of these companies are not worth using/trusting. Has anyone used this company or a similar one with any success?

Thanks for any help. "

Friday, April 2, 2010

Article : Consumer Credit Counseling Service,Is This A Good Idea?

Consumer Credit Counseling Service,Is This A Good Idea?creditinfocenter.com

Q. Could you tell me about Consumer Credit Counseling Service, i.e., CCCS. How does it work? I am trying to manage my finances and restore credit. This service seems very workable. However, when the time comes (in the next year or so) that I want to borrow for a home, car, education or healthcare for my son, will my credit be worse from consolidating through such a company?

A. It would really depend on how bad your debt is. It may be the right thing for you but I don't usually recommend Consumer Credit Counseling Service unless someone is deeply in debt. It usually ruins your credit. Let me elaborate.

How CCCS works:

Consumer Credit Counseling Service talks to you to determine how much you can afford to pay each month. Then they negotiate with your creditors, getting them to accept lower monthly payments until all your debts are paid. CCCS will make you sign an agreement to not obtain any more debt until the current debt is paid off. You then make a single monthly payment. I believe the payment is made to CCCS and they pay your creditors.

read all

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Article : Debt Consolidation and Consumer Credit Counseling

Debt Consolidation and Consumer Credit CounselingBy Marjorie Salada

Debt consolidation and consumer credit counseling are both ways of eliminating your debt. Consumer credit counseling is actually a form of debt consolidation, but it does not involve a loan. Sometimes the term debt consolidation can also refer to a home equity loan that is used to pay off debt. Debt consolidation refers to a solution that consolidates your debts and allows you to make one monthly payment to cover all your debts.

A debt consolidation loan is a viable means of paying off your debt, but I do not recommend it. If you have credit card debt or are enrolled in credit counseling and do nothing, your creditors can report you to the credit bureau and make numerous collection calls, but that is about it. However, if you have a debt consolidation loan and cannot make the payments, the consequences are much more severe. Your creditor can start foreclosure proceedings on your home. Many people have debt consolidation loans, but there are better ways.

Consumer credit counseling is a form of debt consolidation, but it does not require a loan. Debt counseling is a way for people to get out of debt without incurring additional debt. A debt management agency can help you get on a plan that will help you have your unsecured debts paid off in five years or less. If it takes longer than five years, you may want to consider other debt relief options.

Your credit counselor will interact with you lenders and they will no longer be allowed to make collections calls to you as long as you follow the terms of the plan. There are many benefits to debt consolidation with a debt service. Here are just a few of the benefits you will see by consolidating with a credit counseling agency:

*Reduced and possibly eliminated interest rates
*One convenient payment each month
*No more collection calls
*No more fees
*Budgeting and financial education resources

The biggest part of being successful with a debt management plan is not getting into something that you don't think you can manage. If you are given a quote that you don't think you can handle, you are setting yourself up for failure if you accept the proposal.

Debt relief is something you need to go into with an open mind and the attitude that you are going to do what it takes to become debt free. The most difficult part of getting out of debt is recognizing that there is a problem and asking for the necessary debt help.

source : http://ezinearticles.com/?Debt-Consolidation-and-Consumer-Credit-Counseling&id=1289132

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Article : Beware of Consumer Credit Counseling - Debt Negotiators

You've watched the TV commercials, heard the radio ads, saw the web banners and SPAM in your e-mail:

    "LOWER your interest rates and payments!"

    "Combine your bills into ONE LOW monthly payment!"

    "We can eliminate up to 60% of your debt through negotiations!"

Who are those outfits and WHAT will you get?

They promise to reduce your debts and payments, often hyping their non profit status. The non profits are usually funded by the finance industry, the goal is to reduce bankruptcies. Creditors don't want the debts discharged, they rather forgive some interest and fees and collect whatever they can.

I also reviewed some of the contracts for debt negotiators and I was appalled by the outrageous fees charged to the people who would often qualify to discharge their entire unsecured debt through bankruptcy for just a few hundred dollars.

November 4, 2001 Washington Post article:

Easing the Credit Crunch?
AmeriDebt Is One of a Breed Of New Debt-Counseling Firms Whose Business Practices Are Drawing Regulators' Attention

"When his creditors didn't receive that month's payments, Reed said, he was charged late fees, over-the-limit penalties and higher interest rates. "My credit had been absolutely spotless, but now it's ruined," he said."

Paying off your debts will most likely NOT save your credit rating

Bankruptcy is often referred to as the "10 year mistake" by many of these debt negotiating and credit counseling companies.

Of course bankruptcy lowers your credit scores significantly for a few years. However, the credit counseling notation found on many credit reports for people who thought they were doing the "right thing" by paying back almost their entire debt can be worse than the bankruptcy.

Some people are lucky and those notations go away once the accounts are paid off. Unfortunately you can also end up with credit such as the scanned Equifax report below:

  • "Consumer Credit Counseling" -- rated similar to bankruptcy
  • "30 (or 60) days past due x times" -- LATE payments, while the consumer made EVERY payment on time
  • "Pays 61-90 days" -- while the consumer made EVERY payment on time
  • "Account closed by credit grantor" - often consumers have to close all accounts when entering the program

FACT: Your credit rating is most likely BETTER 2 years after discharging your debts than 3 years after entering a payment plan.

Yes, there WILL be creditors who won't offer you credit with a bankruptcy, even after several years. BUT, why would you need that credit?

Why would you even WANT a Home Depot charge card with a 20% interest rate when you have $$$$$ in the bank? Remember that when you discharge your debts, you then can start SAVING your money.

So, BEFORE you enter a repayment plan, you MUST get in writing that NO derogatory data will be placed on your credit reports as long as you make your payments on time. Should you find a company who is willing to do that, PLEASE post in the forum or fax that statement to me at (571) 222-1000.

........ read all from the source : bayhouse http://www.bayhouse.com/credit-counseling.shtml

Friday, October 26, 2007

Article : Common features of Debt Management Programs

After joining a DMP, the creditors will close the customer's accounts and restrict the accounts to future charges. The most common benefit of a DMP as advertised by most agencies is the consolidation of multiple monthly payments into one monthly payment, which is usually less than the sum of the individual payments previously paid by the customer. This is because credit cards banks will usually accept a lower monthly payment from a customer in a DMP than if the customer were paying the account on their own. Some DMPs advertise that payments can be cut by 50%, although a reduction of 10-20% is more common.

The second feature of a DMP is a reduction in interest rates charged by creditors. A customer with a defaulted credit card account will often be paying an interest rate approaching 30%. Upon joining a DMP, credit card banks sometimes lower the annual percentage rates charged to 5-10%, and a few eliminate interest altogether. This reduction in interest allows the counseling agencies to advertise that their customers will be debt free in periods of 3-6 years, rather than the 20+ years that it would take to pay off a large amount of debt at high interest rates.

A third benefit offered by credit counseling agencies is the process of bringing delinquent accounts current. This is often called "reaging" or "curing" an account. This usually occurs after making a series of on-time payments through the debt management program as a show of good faith and commitment to completion of the program. For example, a client with an account with a monthly payment of $50 which has not been paid in two months might be considered by the creditor to be 60 days past due. After joining the DMP and making three consecutive monthly payments, the creditor could reage the account to reflect a current status. Thereafter the monthly payment due on the statements would be the monthly payment negotiated by the DMP, and the account report as current to the credit bureaus. It should be noted that this process does not eliminate the prior delinquencies from the credit bureau reports. It merely gives a fresh start and an opportunity for the client to begin building a positive credit history. Like all derogatory credit information, the passage of time will lessen the impact of the negative marks when credit scores are calculated.

source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_counseling

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