Showing posts with label credit card cash advance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label credit card cash advance. Show all posts

December 28, 2007

The Credit Card Check Trap – One You Should Avoid

The other day I received a “special offer” from my credit card company, along with a set of blank checks. The offer stated that I could use these checks to pay for anything I wanted, for any amount (up to my credit limit) at a promotional 3.99% fixed APR until the balance is paid. They suggested I use it to make a down payment on a new car, take a vacation, or make some home improvements. Sounds wonderful, doesn’t it? Yes…until you read the fine print!

These checks once again reminded me of the trap that I talked about in an earlier blog, but is well worth reiterating this week after Christmas when most will start receiving their credit card statements for all those financed Christmas purchases. Many will be shocked by the total owed and looking for some way to ease the burden. These low-interest checks certainly appear on the surface to be an answer to a prayer, but buyer beware! There are three major gotchas with these checks that will have you crying the blues if you don’t take the time to read and understand the fine print!

  1. Transaction Fee: In the fine print it states that there will be a transaction fee of 3% applied to the amount of the check. So, let’s say you write a check for $5,000 to pay for your family’s Christmas vacation. That means you will be charged $150 to write that check. Well, you say, maybe it is worth it in order to get that low interest rate until the balance is paid off.
  2. Payment Allocation: That brings us to the next gotcha. In the “Important Information” on the back of the offer, the credit card company states that it MAY allocate payments to the balances with the lowest APRs before applying payments to higher APR balances. The operative word “may” really means “it has the right to” and trust me, it WILL allocate your payments to the lowest rate first. Since you probably made other purchases with your credit card and those purchases naturally accrue interest at your standard higher interest rate of say, 21%, those purchases will now be the last in line to be paid off. By writing one of those low-interest checks, your next credit card payment will be applied to that lower-rate check balance instead of toward your new, higher-rate purchases. This means your new purchases will sit there, building up interest at the higher rate, and you can't stop it without paying off the low-interest balance in full, the very balance you had hoped to pay off over time. So, unless you make no other purchases, of what possible benefit are these low-interest checks?
  3. Grace Period: The final gotcha is that there is no grace period on these checks. Interest starts accruing from the transaction date.

Instead of falling prey to one of these offers that can actually compound your credit card debt problem, use this time to make a resolution and begin a plan to put yourself on the path to financial freedom in 2008.

Get Out of Debt While Cutting Your Monthly Payment

If you’re one of the thousands of people with high credit card debt (over $10,000), have minimal savings and are the one in six who pays only the minimum due every month, then you need a realistic plan to get yourself out of debt and start working towards improving your credit rating. By enrolling in a debt settlement program, you could realistically be out of debt in months instead of years and often for less money per month than what you are currently paying, including interest and penalties. For more information about what debt settlement is, how it can help you, and who you should contact, Click Here.

Don’t let embarrassment, stigma, or the sense that negotiating your way out is not the moral way to get out of debt. The Credit Card Industry is one of the most profitable industries in the United States. Citibank alone earns more profit than both Wal-Mart and Microsoft. Yet this industry has more complaints filed against it than any other industry in the U.S. Getting debt free and starting a financial plan to build wealth instead of debt is one of the best things you can do for yourself and your family.

November 11, 2007

Waiting too Long to Seek Debt Relief Help– Mounting Credit Card Debt Mistake # 5

With the average American household carrying around $9,000 in credit card debt and many of those facing rising mortgage payments due to higher property taxes and rising interest rates, it’s easy to see how so many people can become overwhelmed – feeling as though there is no way out! Believe it or not, if you are in serious debt, one of the biggest mistakes you can make is to do nothing!

In this series of blogs, I have been discussing 5 of the biggest mistakes people make when faced with mounting debt, especially credit card debt, and providing some ways you can avoid or correct your mistakes. In my prior blogs I covered the problem with only paying the minimums on your credit card bills, using your home’s equity for credit card debt consolidation, using balance transfer card offers to move debt and using cash advances to make credit card payments. Today I will cover the fifth mistake: Waiting until it’s too late to negotiate with your creditors.

5. Wait until it’s too late to negotiate: If you are one of the thousands of people who find themselves struggling to pay even the minimums, the worst thing you can do is wait until it is too late to face up to your problem and take action. Don’t wait until you find yourself unable to pay.

Once you fail to make your required minimum payments, the credit card company considers your account to be delinquent or “at-risk” which weakens any leverage you may have to settle with your creditors. Delinquent or at-risk accounts are usually turned over to either an internal collection department or an external collection agency, which, in turn, begins contacting you for payment. The longer your account is at-risk, the more likely it is that your creditors will take action against you.

In some cases your account may be sold to a third-party collection agency (for usually pennies on the dollar). Once this happens, the collection agency owns the debt and begins hounding you for payment. The credit card company is now out of the loop and no longer interested in working with you; they’ve technically “gotten their money” from the collection agency.

Failure to pay on your part will likely lead creditors to take legal action against you for breach of contract. Yes, that's right, you signed a contract when you accepted that attractive credit card offer. Once you have a lawsuit filed against you, it is very difficult to negotiate a settlement. You could end up losing your home and having your credit ruined!

Before it’s too late you should check out whether debt settlement is an option for you. Don’t wait until you have lost your leverage to negotiate with your credit card companies on the balances you owe.

How Debt Settlement Works
Debt Settlement is a program in which a qualified settlement or mediation company works for you with your creditors, to “negotiate” a reduction in your unsecured debt. Under this type of program, each of your creditors agrees to accept a portion of what you owe them, in lump sum payouts, as payment in full. You’ll get out of debt for less than what you owe and in a fraction of the time it would take to pay off the debt just making the minimum monthly payments. Because they are settling hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt for hundreds of clients, they have leverage with your creditors that you don’t have. Also, the debt settlement company is in a better position to hold off creditor lawsuits because your creditors recognize that they will likely get more of their money working with the settlement company than they would by harassing or suing you. While your credit rating will drop as a result of being in a settlement program, you won’t ruin your credit for years like you would with a “failure to pay” judgment against you, or with bankruptcy or even consumer credit counseling.

How did Debt Settlement come about? – Debt Settlement, or Debt Negotiation as it is some times called, is a rapidly growing financial service industry that grew out of the exponentially mounting consumer debt and the realization that consumer credit counseling, with its 60-70% dropout rate, just wasn’t working for those seriously in debt.

But it is important to know that not all debt settlement/negotiation companies are alike.

Who should you contact? – There is one company than stands out because of their excellent track record (quality service and results) and their unique approach. I recommend that you start with this company for a free debt consultation.

The program is Credit Card Relief™.

Unique Attorney-Driven Approach - Their program is unique in that Credit Card Relief uses a consortium of attorneys. A network of participating program attorneys, local to their clients, provide a free initial consultation to determine if debt settlement is the best solution and once enrolled, offer limited representation. Your creditors are contacted and told that you now have representation in settling your debt. You now have a professional working for you. That’s where your relief starts. The debt is then mediated by a nationally known debtor mediation law firm.

Great Track Record - Credit Card Relief has years of experience, settling over $100,000,000 (one-hundred million) of debt for thousands of clients.

Operate in 46 states.

Low Monthly Payment – Credit Card Relief can cut your monthly payment by as much as 50%.

Your Money is Safe - In addition, each Credit Card Relief client is part of a unique Enrolled Member Trust, through which all their funds are deposited into a totally insured, risk-free trust account with a national bank. No money leaves your account without your permission.

Satisfied Clients - Credit Card Relief provides superior service, with on-going support throughout the duration of the program, through their full-time Client Care and Compliance departments. They have Zero open complaints with the more than 400 Better Business Bureaus (BBB’s) and the over 16,000 local, state, and federal regulatory agencies monitoring the industry.You can obtain a free debt consultation from Credit Card Relief™ by clicking here. They can help you determine the best solution for getting you free of debt. For more information, read my blog dated September 29, 2006.

October 24, 2007

Using Credit Card Cash Advances – Mounting Credit Card Debt Mistake # 4

In this series of blogs, I am discussing 5 of the biggest mistakes people make when faced with mounting debt, especially credit card debt, and providing some ways you can avoid or correct your mistakes. In my three prior blogs I covered the problem with only paying the minimums on your credit card bills, using your home’s equity for credit card debt consolidation and using balance transfer card offers to move debt. Today we will discuss the fourth mistake.

4. Rob Peter to pay Paul: Use credit card cash advances: Cash advances may seem like a way to hold the wolf at bay, but borrowing cash from one credit card to pay on other cards or bills will really cost you and only delay the inevitable. Many people don’t realize that cash advances typically carry both a transaction fee like balance transfers of around 3% and a higher finance charge (interest rate) than applied to other purchases. This means that when you borrow money at, say, 3% fee plus 24% APR to pay on a bill at, say, 12% APR, you’re robbing Peter to pay Paul with money that is costing you more and digging that debt hole you’re already in even deeper.
  • Be sure to read your credit card statement each month. You may occasionally find that a charge that you considered a “purchase” was actually treated as a cash advance by the credit card company. If you use an ATM machine for a cash advance, there can be an additional charge by the ATM’s bank.
  • Another gotcha occurs when you make a payment toward your balance. Most issuers apply payments to purchases before they apply payments to cash. If you carry a balance on your card, this means that you will continue to pay that higher interest rate on your cash advances until you pay off your entire balance.
  • And there is one more legal gotcha on cash advances: If you get into debt and have to consider bankruptcy, cash advances are exempt from Chapter 7 discharge of debts. You will still have to pay back any cash advances.

You’re in serious trouble if you are borrowing more money to make payments on money you already owe. Becoming dependent on cash advances to "make ends meet" can be a sign of serious debt problems.

If You Are In Serious Debt Trouble Do Consider Debt Settlement

If you have credit card debt over $5,000, are struggling to make the minimum payments each month, take out new cards to help pay off old card balances, or seriously thought you might need to file for bankruptcy, you may qualify for Debt Settlement. Debt Settlement is a program in which a qualified settlement or mediation company works for you with your creditors, to “negotiate” a reduction in your unsecured debt. Under this program, each of your creditors agrees to accept a portion of what you owe them, in lump sum payouts, as payment in full. You’re now out of debt for less than what you owe and in a fraction of the time it would have taken to pay off the debt just making the minimum monthly payments.

Background – Debt Settlement, or Debt Negotiation as it is some times called, is a rapidly growing financial service industry that grew out of the exponentially mounting consumer debt and the realization that consumer credit counseling, with its 60-70% dropout rate, just wasn’t working for those seriously in debt.

Who should you contact? – There is one company than stands out because of their excellent track record (quality service and results) and their unique approach. I recommend that you start with this company for a free debt consultation.The program is Credit Card Relief™.

What Makes Them Unique?

Great Track Record - Credit Card Relief has years of experience, settling over $100,000,000 (one-hundred million) of debt for thousands of clients.

Operate in 46 states.

Low Monthly Payment – Credit Card Relief can cut your monthly payment by as much as 50%.Unique Program Approach - Their program is unique in that Credit Card Relief uses a consortium of attorneys. A network of participating program attorneys, local to their clients, provide a free initial consultation to determine if debt settlement is the best solution and once enrolled, offer limited representation. The debt is then mediated by a nationally known debtor mediation law firm.

Your Money is Safe - In addition, each Credit Card Relief client is part of a unique Enrolled Member Trust, through which all their funds are deposited into a totally insured, risk-free trust account with a national bank. No money leaves your account without your permission.

Satisfied Clients - Credit Card Relief provides superior service, with on-going support throughout the duration of the program, through their full-time Client Care and Compliance departments. They have Zero open complaints with the more than 400 Better Business Bureaus (BBB’s) and the over 16,000 local, state, and federal regulatory agencies monitoring the industry.

You can obtain a free debt consultation from Credit Card Relief™ by clicking here. They can help you determine the best solution for getting you free of debt. For more information, read my blog dated September 29, 2006.

Check back tomorrow for my next blog that addresses another all too common mistake and what you can do!