Bankruptcy is not the only way to handle
your debt problems. Though it is best to
continue paying your debts in a timely
manner, that is simply not an option for
many people with debt problems.
Debt Settlement
Debt
settlement involves negotiating arrangements
whereby creditors agreed to take less than
the full amount due in a lump-sum payment.
This solution is very dangerous because you
must become extremely delinquent on your
debts in order to gain the leverage
necessary to obtain significant settlements;
even then, nobody can guarantee that a
certain debt can negotiated, and if so, for
how much. There is also no guarantee that a
creditor won't sue you before a negotiated
settlement can be arranged.
Debt
settlement affects how much you pay in
taxes. If you owe $5,000 on a credit card
and the amount is reduced to $2,500, the
savings of $2,500 is considered taxable
income to you and must be reported on your
tax return. This means that you'll have to
pay taxes on the $2,500 savings, which may
reduce your overall savings.
In
addition, a 2005 report issued by the
National Consumer Law Center entitled An
Investigation of Debt Settlement Companies:
An Unsettling Business for Consumers found
that very few consumers ever complete a debt
settlement program. The report shows that
consumers continue to face collection
efforts and their debts grow as creditors
continue to pile on fees and interest
charges.
Credit Counseling
Credit counseling involves a negotiated
reduction in payments with each of your
creditors. Creditors will often put a
statement onto the credit report that says
you are using a counseling service - this
may harm your credit rating depending upon
your situation.
Many
agencies tell you that it will take a
certain amount of time for your repayment
plan to be completed, but what you may not
be told is that it all depends upon what
your creditors accept as repayment.
Creditors hold the cards in this situation -
some will drop the interest rates, some
won't, some will accept the counseling plan,
and some won't. Each individual plan is
different and yet, creditors must be
universally satisfied. If not, your
repayment plan can take many more months -
even years - longer than the agency
originally may tell you it will take.
Many
credit counseling agencies are funded by the
major credit card issuers. This means that
counseling agencies say they are working for
you but are actually working for the credit
card companies. If your counseling agency is
accepting payments from credit card issuers,
then they may not be working in your best
interests.
Buyer Beware
Always check up on your credit counseling or
debt settlement agency. Get in touch with
the Better Business Bureau, make sure the
agency is licensed, find out if they accept
payments directly from creditors, and get a
written guarantee of how long it will take
you to get your debts paid in full.
See
credit repair section for more
information.