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Credit Counseling – Six Tips To Avoid Counseling Scams
By: Charles Essmeier
Credit counseling is a useful service for anyone with problem debt. A good
counseling agency can provide advice regarding money management and debt
consolidation. They can also help arrange a repayment plan with your creditors
to help you get out of debt. A bad agency can charge excessive fees, pocket
money that was intended to pay your bills, and steer you into greater debt than
before. Predatory credit counseling has become a multibillion dollar industry,
and with the recent passage of the Bankruptcy Abuse and Consumer Protection Act,
credit counseling will soon become mandatory for anyone filing for bankruptcy.
How can you avoid becoming a victim of credit counseling scams? How can you
choose a helpful and reputable credit counselor?
Here are a few tips that can help you avoid becoming a victim of predatory
agencies:
# Many agencies claim to be nonprofit, but that doesn’t mean they don’t charge
money or work with for-profit companies. Inquire about the fees the company
charges. Is there a setup fee? Monthly payments? Does the company keep the first
payment, or does some of it go towards your debts? Fees should fall within your
ability to pay, and any agency that is trying to help you will know this. A
company that charges hundreds or thousands of dollars in setup fees is probably
not interested in anything other than your money.
# Ask the counselor how he or she is compensated. A salary or hourly wage is a
good answer, but you should be suspicious if they are on commission or earn
incentives by steering you towards expensive debt consolidation programs. A good
counselor should direct you towards solutions that help you, not solutions that
earn them more money.
# Will your creditors work with this agency? Call your creditors directly and
ask them if they will negotiate with the specific agency you’re seeing.
Counselors often state that they can get your creditors to lower fees,
restructure debt or lower interest rates. Can they? Call the creditors yourself
to be sure.
# Make sure that you get all of the counselors promises and terms in writing.
Anything that he or she tells you verbally isn’t binding, so don’t believe it if
it isn’t written down.
# Make sure your agency provides you with monthly reports that state how much
you have paid them and who is receiving the payments. Don’t take them at their
word that your bills are being paid; verify it.
# Check with your local Chamber of Commerce or Better Business Bureau to make
sure that there are no outstanding complaints against this agency. The
counseling business is full of fraud, and complaints are common. It’s smart to
inquire.
By taking your time, asking the right questions, and doing proper research, you
should be able to find a helpful and reputable credit counselor who can help you
reduce or eliminate your debts. Thousands of Americans are victimized each year
by predatory counseling firms, but there’s no reason why you should become a
victim of one. If you have problem debt, you have trouble enough already without
looking for more.
About the Author:
©Copyright 2005 by Retro Marketing. Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro
Marketing, a firm devoted to informational Websites, including http://www.End-Your-Debt.com,
a site devoted to debt consolidation and credit counseling. |