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Debt Tips
If Your Credit Counselor Has Gone Out of Business
What happens to your DMP if the credit counseling company that
managed your debts shuts down? A counseling agency that is going out of
business may send you a notice telling you that your DMP is being
transferred to another company. Or it may tell you that you need to
take some action to keep your financial recovery on track. If a
government agency has filed an action against your credit counseling
company, you may get a notice from a third party. If you discover that
the organization handling your DMP is going out of business you need
to:
- contact your bank to stop payment if you are making your DMP payments through automatic withdrawal.
- start paying your bills directly to your creditors.
- notify
your creditors that the organization handling your DMP is going out of
business. Consider working out a payment plan with your creditors
yourself. Ask if they will give you a reduction on your interest rate
without a DMP.
- order a copy
of your credit report. Check for late payments — or missed DMP payments
— that may result from the company going out of business. If you see
“late” notations you don’t expect, call the creditor immediately and
ask that the notation be removed. Understand that they have no
obligation to do it.
If
payments are late because the organization handling your DMP has failed
to make scheduled payments, the consequences can be just as devastating
as if you failed to make payments to the DMP. If you do not act quickly
to make arrangements with your creditors, you could incur late charges
that increase your debt, lose the lower interest rates associated with
the DMP, and have “late” marks on your credit report.
Source: The Federal Trade Commission
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Date Added: 2009-04-08 Views : 232