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How to Write a Debt Settlement Letter PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 20 April 2010 08:56

Debt SettlementWhen you have finally concertized an action plan to get rid of your debt for good, it is important to come up with an effective debt settlement letter that is able to summarize your debt repayment plans to a creditor. If this is your first time to write a debt settlement letter, it is important to know the various parts of such a letter in order to be able to express your thoughts and action plans concretely and clearly.

When writing a debt settlement letter, one of the important things to do is to state the amount of your outstanding balance or debt. You therefore need to know exactly how much you still owe your creditor in order to pay it all off. This should be in the first part of your letter. Acknowledge to your creditor that you have an outstanding balance to pay off in specific terms.

 

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Debt Settlement vs. Debt Management PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 20 April 2010 08:50

A great video from Cambridge Credit that compares debt settlement and debt management agencies:

 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 20 April 2010 08:56 )
 
Record High Consumer Debt PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 24 July 2008 05:35
The average American household bears thousands of dollars in debt. We spend more than we earn, and then find ourselves in trouble. Trish Regan reports.
 
 
Consumer Credit Counselling Services PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 19 July 2008 11:16
What Consumer Credit Counseling Services (CCCS) does is negotiate your debts and payments with your creditors, reducing some of them and getting creditors to lower the minimum monthly payment in other cases. CCCS generally is not recommended unless you are deeply in debt. Although CCCS may be helpful in pulling you out of debt as painlessly as possible, it can have the bad side effect of ruining your credit.
Here’s how CCCS works:
  • Consumer Credit Counseling Services talks to you to determine how much you can afford to pay each month.
  • They negotiate with your creditors, getting them to accept lower monthly payments until all your debts are paid.
  • You must sign an agreement to not obtain any new debt until the current debt is paid off.
  • You make a single monthly payment to CCCS who pays your creditors.

CCCS usually does not get the creditor to agree to report you as paying on time, and even if they do, they do not get this agreement in enforceable form (in writing). If your creditors report you late, your credit report may show 30-day, 60- day, and 90-day+ lates, essentially ruining your credit. Although you will have a good reason why your credit rating looks this way, it will fall on deaf ears.
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 July 2008 06:04 )
 
CONSUMER CREDIT RIGHTS PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 19 July 2008 11:13
You have a number of important rights, including:

• The right to know what your credit records contain.
• The right to be told by a credit bureau the nature, substance and sources (except investigative sources) of the information (except medical) collected about you.
• The right to know the name and address of the credit bureau responsible for preparing a credit report used to deny you credit, insurance or employment, or to increase the cost of your insurance or credit.
• The right to a free copy of your credit report if you are denied credit and the denial is due at least in part to credit record information. (Requests for a free copy must be made within 30 days of your receipt of the notification of denial.)
• The right to review your credit report in person at the credit bureau, by phone or by mail.
• The right to take someone with you to review your file if you visit a credit bureau in person.
• The right to have investigated within a reasonable period of time any information in your credit record that you dispute. (if the credit bureau deems your request frivolous or irrelevant," the law says that the credit bureau need not investigate.)
• The right to have inaccurate information deleted from your credit record if a credit bureau investigation finds the information to be erroneous.
• The right to have information deleted if the credit bureau cannot verify it through its investigation.
• The right to have the credit bureau notify-at no cost to you those you name who previously reviewed the incorrect or incomplete information in your credit file that the information has been removed or changed.
• The right to know who has received a copy of your credit report over the past six months for credit-granting purposes.
• The right to know the names of everyone who has seen your credit record over the last two years for employment purposes.
• The right to include a brief written statement that will become a permanent part of your credit record explaining your side of any dispute that cannot be resolved with a credit bureau. (You may ask that the credit reporting agency share your written statement with certain businesses. The agency must do so without charge if you make your request within 30 days of being denied credit.)
• The right to have negative credit-related information deleted from your credit record after seven years.
• The right to have a bankruptcy deleted after ten years.
• The right to sue a credit bureau for damages if it willfully and negligently violates the law. (if you are successful in your lawsuit, you may collect attorney fees and court costs as well.)
• The right to be notified by a company that it has requested an investigative report on you.
• The right to request from a company pursuing an investigative report more information about the nature and the scope of the investigation.
• The right to know the nature and the substance of the investigative report but not the sources.
Last Updated ( Saturday, 19 July 2008 11:15 )
 
Credit and Debt Counseling and repair Agencies PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 19 July 2008 11:03
Credit and debt counseling agencies are organizations funded primarily by major creditors, such as department stores, credit card companies and banks, who can work with you to help you repay your debts and improve your financial picture.
Many are nonprofit companies, but some are not. To use a credit or debt counseling agency to help you pay your debts, you must have some disposable income. A counselor contacts your creditors to let them know that you’ve sought assistance and need more time to pay. Based on your income and debts, the counselor, with your creditors, decides on how much you pay. You then make one payment each month to the counseling agency, which in turn pays your creditors. The agency asks the creditors to return a small percentage of the money to fund its work. This arrangement is generally referred
to as a debt management program.
Some creditors will make overtures to help you when you’re on a debt management program. But few creditors will make interest concessions, such as waiving a portion of the accumulated interest to help you repay the principal. More likely, you’ll get late fees dropped and the opportunity to reinstate your credit if you successfully complete a debt management program.

Participating in a credit or debt counselling agency’s debt management program is a little bit like filing for Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
Working with a credit or debt counselling agency has one advantage: no bankruptcy will appear on your credit record. But a debt management program also has two disadvantages when compared to Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
First, if you miss a payment, Chapter 13 protects you from creditors who would otherwise start collection actions. A debt management program has no such protection and any one creditor can pull the plug on your plan. Also, a debt management program plan usually requires that your debts be paid in full. In Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you’re required to pay the value of your nonexempt property, which can mean that you pay only a small fraction of your unsecured debts.
The combination of high consumer debt and easy access to information (the Internet) has led to an explosion in the number of credit and debt counseling agencies ready to offer you help. Some provide limited services, such as budgeting and debt repayment, while others offer a range of services, from debt counseling to financial planning.

When choosing a credit and debt counselling agency, look for a company that is truly a nonprofit. Many for-profit outfits use names that sound like a nonprofit, such as “foundation,” to confuse you.
And your inquiry shouldn’t stop there. Many of the unscrupulous credit and debt counseling companies have nonprofit status. These companies often try to get you to pay “voluntary contributions” up front or pay other fees. At a minimum, always ask about fees before agreeing to give your business to a particular counselor.
Last Updated ( Saturday, 19 July 2008 11:07 )
 
STEPS TO REPAIRING YOUR CREDIT PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 18 July 2008 11:42
There are 10 easy steps to repairing your credit, but you must have patience and persistence. The credit bureaus are not always greatly cooperative, or fast moving.

1. GET YOUR CREDIT REPORT.
Request them from all three of the credit reporting agencies—Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.

2. ANALYZE YOUR CREDIT REPORT.
Analyze your credit
Last Updated ( Friday, 18 July 2008 12:45 )
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