If your credit card balances, bills, and other debts remain unpaid they keep on getting accumulated. And this implies higher monthly payments that get harder and harder to afford. Besides, any new debt you take comes with higher interest rates than before due to the growing risk. Thus, you need to control your debts and pay them off on time so that they don’t pile up. Or else obtain a debt consolidation loan, so that you can manage your debts easily.
Advantages Of Debt Consolidation Loans
Debt Consolidation loans come with many benefits. Compared to credit card debt and most of the other loan types, consolidation loans carry significantly lower interest rates. Debt Consolidation agencies negotiate with your creditors new repayment programs so as to make your debt less heavy. In the negotiation process, the debt consolidation agency, with your consent, agrees an amount that you can pay back easily.
With your creditors, new loan conditions can be agreed or directly, the debt is repaid using the money you get from a consolidation loan. The new loan lender ends up being your only creditor and your loan installments will be significantly lower than the combination of all your previous debt payments.
Debt Consolidation Disadvantages
The process of
1. Get a tri-merge of your credit report. This is one report that consists of your credit information from the 3 major credit repositories: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. If you must, spend the extra couple of dollars to see your actual scores — if you don’t know what your beginning scores are, how can you tell if they’ve improved?
2. Get a “quick sense” of your credit. If it’s bad, why? This is not as hard as it seems, and you don’t need to be an expert to figure it out. Some examples are collections, judgements, tax liens, bankruptcies, slow/late payments, mortgage lates, repossessions…that’s the sort of thing. Figure out what’s taking the biggest toll on your scores. We’ll come back to this in a moment.
3. Count up your active accounts…you need at least 3. The credit agencies like a blend of accounts: revolving credit, installment, and long-term installments like a mortgage. But for now, you need at least 3 active accounts. If you don’t have any open accounts, do not start applying for credit cards! New lines of credit like this will actually drop-kick your scores. Instead, here’s the lightning fast solution: Piggyback off of someone’s good credit card. Here’s how you do it: identify someone in your life — family and/or friend — who you trust, and most importantly, who trusts you. Tell them that you’re working on improving your credit scores. Ask them if they have a credit card that meets the following criteria: at least 2 years of unblemished, never-been-late payment history; a balance that is no more than 40% of the credit limit (ie, $400 balance on a $1000 limit card). If they have a card — or ideally, a couple of them — that fits this bill, then you’re in luck! Now, here’s where the trust comes in: You’re going to have them add you to this credit card. They will call their card company and ask that you be added as an authorized user of the account. Again, the trust factor is paramount! You will not be receiving a copy of the card in the mail; you will not be using the card…it’s not your card. You are merely being added to the account, and in turn, this nice, credit friendly account is being added to your credit history. It will appear as a Joint Account…and the credit history — as long as it is — will appear on your credit report, just as if the account had been yours all along!
4. Pay down your debt! When I speak to people about their credit scores, they always want me to magically fix their scores without any effort on their part. Well, you ran up the debts, it’s your responsibility to pay them down. Here’s the formula: your first goal is to pay down the balance to 50% of the limit (so a $1000 limit card needs to be paid down to $500). Do this for all of your accounts before you take aim on a single account and decide to pay it off entirely. At a 50% balance, you should no longer be penalized for out of control balances. Second step: knock those balances down to 30% of the limit. If you do this, your scores will really soar! It’s a fact that the credit agencies reward you with positive points when you balances are at 30% or less.
5. Finally, DO NOT CLOSE YOUR CREDIT CARD ACCOUNTS ONCE YOU’VE PAID THEM. This is a huge mistake that I see committed again and again. If you can get your balance down to zero, throw yourself a party (pay with cash, not credit), but don’t close the accounts. Closing accounts hurts your credit because it’s bridge you’re burning: you’ll never receive any more good credit points from a closed account.
As someone who helps people through credit repair situations daily, take it from me…these things work. There is hope! Don’t give up!
Bill Paulk writes on marketing & business-related issues. You can learn more by visiting my blog at credit-debt-repair.blogspot.com/ credit-debt-repair.blogspot.com/