Credit Repair Specials

November 6, 2009

Engaging A Debt Settlement Firm Can Bring Debt Collectors Down On You.

Debt settlement firms want you to have at least $10,000 in credit card debt. They want $1500-2000 of that $10,000 in fees paid first before they begin working on settling your debt. They tell you to stop paying your credit card and to send those payments to them for their fees and to save for a lump-sum settlement.

What happens if they cannot settle with your credit card bank? What happens to the money you have paid them? What happens to your credit card account that is in arrears? What happens to your credit rating? How long will it take you to save $7000, $2000 for the debt settlement firm and $5000 for a 50 percent lump sum settlement?

$500 a month will total $7000 after 14 months of payments to the debt settlement firm. At that pace it will be over one year before $5000 can be paid (after $2000 in fees is taken) in a lump sum to end the debt. But, that debt may no longer exist because the banks charge off unpaid credit card debts after six months. Then within the year, they sell those bad debts for about 10 cents on the dollar.

That means your debt is owned by a junk debt buyer before the debt settlement firm has settled it. It also means the bank has no motivation to remove that debt’s bad mark on your credit report and that the negative listing will be there for seven years.

The junk debt buyer will make an effort to collect the debt, and you need to be ready for that, according to the Credit Card Debt Survival Guide. On the other hand, if you are unaware and waiting for the debt settlement firm to finish what they started, you could be vulnerable to a debt collection attorney.

So, your settlement fee is gone. Your debt is not settled. Your credit is bruised. And, you are fighting debt collectors. If you are lucky you still have $5000, but only if the settlement firm put it in a third-party escrow account.

Matt Highlander spent months researching strategies for credit card debt relief. Read the complete 230-page Credit Card Debt Survival Guide

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Filed under Credit by Matthew Highlander

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