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Debt Management
Must-Dos for Anyone with a Debt Management Plan
Organizations that advertise credit counseling often arrange for
consumers to pay debts through a debt management plan (DMP). In a DMP,
you deposit money each month with a credit counseling organization. The
organization uses these deposits to pay your credit card bills, student
loans, medical bills, or other unsecured debts according to a payment
schedule they’ve worked out with you and your creditors. Creditors may
agree to lower interest rates or waive certain fees if you are repaying
through a DMP.
The FTC has found that some
organizations that offer DMPs have deceived and defrauded consumers,
and recommends that consumers check their bills to make sure that the
organization fulfills its promises. If you are paying through a DMP,
contact your creditors and confirm that they have accepted the proposed
plan before you send any payments to the organization handling your
DMP. Once the creditors have accepted the DMP, it is important to:
- make regular, timely payments.
- always read your monthly statements promptly to make sure your creditors are getting paid according to your plan.
- contact
the organization responsible for your DMP if you will be unable to make
a scheduled payment, or if you discover that creditors are not being
paid.
You need to be aware that
if payments to your DMP and creditors are not made on time, you could
lose the progress you’ve made on paying down your debt, or the benefits
of being in a DMP, including lower interest rates and fee waivers.
Although creditors may have forgiven late payments that you made before
you began the DMP, the creditors may be unwilling or unable to do so if
payments are late after you have enrolled in a DMP. If you fall behind
on your payments, you may not be able to have your accounts “re-aged”
again (reported as current), even if you start a new DMP with a new
counselor. That means your credit report will have “late” marks and you
will rack up late fees, which, in turn, will lead to more debt that
could take longer to pay off.
Source: The Federal Trade Commission
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Date Added: 2009-04-08 Views : 238