Payday Loans Equal Very Costly Cash
Payday Loans Equal Very Costly Cash.
“I just need enough cash to tide me over until payday.”
“GET CASH UNTIL PAYDAY! . . . $100 OR MORE . . . FAST.”
The ads are on the radio, television, the Internet, even in the
mail. They refer to payday loans, cash advance loans, check advance
loans, post-dated check loans, or deferred deposit loans. The Federal
Trade Commission, the nation’s consumer protection agency, says that
regardless of their name, these small, short-term, high-rate loans by
check cashers, finance companies and others all come at a very high
price.
Here’s how they work: A borrower writes a personal check payable to
the lender for the amount the person wants to borrow, plus the fee they
must pay for borrowing. The company gives the borrower the amount of
the check less the fee, and agrees to hold the check until the loan is
due, usually the borrower’s next payday. Or, with the borrower’s
permission, the company deposits the amount borrowed — less the fee —
into the borrower’s checking account electronically. The loan amount is
due to be debited the next payday. The fees on these loans can be a
percentage of the face value of the check — or they can be based on
increments of money borrowed: say, a fee for every $50 or $100
borrowed. The borrower is charged new fees each time the same loan is
extended or “rolled over.”
The federal Truth in Lending Act treats payday loans like other
types of credit: the lenders must disclose the cost of the loan. Payday
lenders must give you the finance charge (a dollar amount) and the
annual percentage rate (APR — the cost of credit on a yearly basis) in
writing before you sign for the loan. The APR is based on several
things, including the amount you borrow, the interest rate and credit
costs you’re being charged, and the length of your loan.
A payday loan — that is, a cash advance secured by a personal check
or paid by electronic transfer is very expensive credit. How expensive?
Say you need to borrow $100 for two weeks. You write a personal check
for $115, with $15 the fee to borrow the money. The check casher or
payday lender agrees to hold your check until your next payday. When
that day comes around, either the lender deposits the check and you
redeem it by paying the $115 in cash, or you roll-over the loan and are
charged $15 more to extend the financing for 14 more days. If you agree
to electronic payments instead of a check, here’s what would happen on
your next payday: the company would debit the full amount of the loan
from your checking account electronically, or extend the loan for an
additional $15. The cost of the initial $100 loan is a $15 finance
charge and an annual percentage rate of 391 percent. If you roll-over
the loan three times, the finance charge would climb to $60 to borrow
the $100.
Source: The Federal Trade Commission
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Date Added: 2009-04-09 Views : 192