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Debt Service
Be Careful When Choosing a Debt Service
Credit cards seem to make everything easier. They make it easier to pay for purchases, easier to put off paying the bills until the end of the month and easier to accumulate some serious debt. In the U.S., consumers have racked up hundreds of billions of dollars in credit card debt. Many people want a way out, and desperation causes them to sign up for the first debt service plan they can find. However, many people have found that some debt services actually cause more problems than the problems people had initially wanted to solve.
When you have debt problems, your anxieties extend beyond the debts themselves. When you owe money to several lenders, you not only have to figure out a way to pay it back, but you also have to deal with daily frugality, worrying about meeting your family's basic needs and thinking about your financial future. If you have decided to do something about your debt, then you may think that all you have to do involves signing up for a payment plan and sticking to it. However, many debt service companies don't have your financial interests in mind when they invite you to pay hundreds of dollars of fees or ask for access to your checking account. Before you decide to work with a debt service, you need to find out the exact terms of the plan and how the specifics of the plan will reduce your debt.
People's complaints with debt services have increased over the years, and will probably continue to increase as long as the process of working with debt services continues to involve the high risk that it does. Many people who get help from debt services end up falling even more behind in their payments, increasing their debt, increasing their interest and ruining their credit. Business people have recognized the large consumer market of people who need debt assistance, and unfortunately many businesses have set up unscrupulous practices. Some debt services tempt vulnerable debtors into paying high fees, and then not even distributing the debtors' payments to their creditors on time.
Everybody has a different debt situation. In order to figure out if you will benefit from debt management help, you should discuss your personal finances in person with a debt service agent. Keep in mind that not everyone who has debt needs outside help. The most honest debt services will turn away up to three-fourths of the people who come to them with questions, while other debt services will try to persuade anyone to sign up for a plan. If you feel like the agent wants to force you into something without explaining your questions and concerns, then you probably want to get a second opinion.
Before signing into a debt management agreement, you should always do a background check on the company. You can also find out any legal problems that the company has involvement in by inquiring at your state attorney general's office. Also find out the type of certification the debt services company has, and make sure that the company doesn't consist of untrained agents only out for your money.
Keep in mind that just because a company calls itself "non-profit," it doesn't mean that you shouldn't still maintain skepticism. In fact, non-profit debt services often have some of the worst records because many people make these kinds of assumptions. Although many states have guidelines for debt companies, these guidelines usually don't apply to non-profit companies, which means that greater responsibility rests with the consumer for investigating non-profit companies.
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