Credit Card
Debt Relief
The Truth About Credit Card Debt Management Plans
When credit card debt gets out of control, you may look to a
consumer credit counselling service for help with credit card
debt relief. Before you sign up for one of their plans, read
this.
When you're trying to eliminate credit card debt, you may be
tempted to respond to advertisements for credit card debt
management plans.
How These Plans Are Supposed to provide Credit Card
Debt Relief
Offered by consumer credit counselling services, these debt
management plans will give you a break on credit card interest
rates and fees.
These plans also offer the benefit of credit card debt
consolidation: You make one payment to the consumer credit
counselling agency, and they disburse that money to your
creditors for you.
The Problem with These Credit Card Plans
Unfortunately, many of the plans offered by consumer credit
counseling agencies today charge you high fees for little or
nothing in return.
It used to be that consumer credit counselling services were
paid by the banks and creditors under a policy known as Fair
Share. But when banks and creditors cut back on Fair Share
payments, the credit counseling services began charging
consumers fees. Some charge consumers as much as a full month's
consolidated payment just to set up a debt management plan.
And in reality, they aren't offering you much more than you
could do on your own.
Indeed, there is no reason you can't call the credit card
companies yourself and ask for a reduced interest rate. If
you've been able to keep up with your payments, it's very
likely they'll agree on the spot.
Alternatives For Your Credit Card Debt
Relief
Other steps you can take before signing up with a credit
counseling service debt management plan:
1) Stop using your credit cards.
When you sign up for a debt management plan, you'll be asked
to stop using your credit cards anyway. You'll also be asked to
refrain from applying for credit during the term of the plan.
If you can kick the credit card debt habit on your own, you
won't have to pay anyone else to help you stop it.
2) Assess your situation.
Write down all of the balances you owe on credit cards, car
payments, student loans, mortgages and any other loans you
have. Now write down the interest rates and minimum monthly
payments next to each loan. In this way, you can prioritize
which credit cards to pay off first, and which ones to call to
ask for an interest rate reduction.
3) Shop around for a credit card with a 0% or low
introductory balance transfer rate and transfer your balances
to that card.
Be beware: If you do this, you'll need to keep tabs on when
the introductory rate expires, or you may find your interest
rate jumps up dramatically. Also, you may have to pay a balance
transfer fee. (See the Debt Relief Tools article for help in
figuring out whether a balance transfer is right for you.)
And if you continue to use your old credit cards after
transferring the balances, you'll just dig yourself deeper into
the hole.
If none of these options is right for you, a debt management
plan can help. These plans are offered through consumer credit
counselling services.
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