Category Archives: Credit Card Debts

Entering Into Credit Counseling With A Debt Management Program?

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Filed under Credit Card Debts, Credit Counselors, Debt Management Companies, Debt Management Programs, Questions & Answers

Question: Entering into credit counseling with a debt management program or … ?

I am entering into a debt management program with a credit counseling company. I have about $17,500 in debt and my payment with the company would be about $400 a month.

My question is, would creditors be willing to accept 1/2 of the minimum balance that is due actually? I have 3 cards I’m in debt with, $285/month, $185/month, $165/month respectively.

I’m already 2 payments behind with 2 of the cards. Would the credit card companies accept a personal offer of 1/2 the usual minimum for a certain time frame? So I’d offer them $142.50, $92.50, $82.50.

Or since I’m already behind on payments should I stick with the debt management program (I just signed on and have to make my first payment on 2/28) and wait until I’ve been in the program a few months and then try to talk personally to my creditors and see what I can offer at that time??

Please advise. Thanks.

Is Debt Management Program The Right Way To Go?

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Filed under Credit Card Debts, Debt Management Companies, Debt Management Programs, Questions & Answers

Question: Is debt management program the right way to go?

We are drowning in debt. So far we have managed to get our MINIMUM monthly payments out each month but we are getting no where.

Would a debt management program be a good option for us?

What exactly is a debt management program or debt management plan? Where do I find a reliable debt management company or agency one to work with?

Thinking Of Losing Your House To A Foreclosure? Think Twice!

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Filed under AKPK Debt Management Plan, Credit Card Debts, Financial News & Updates, Home Installment Loans

I used to think losing a house to foreclosure is a financial relief. Well, I was wrong! It is a relief only if there’s NO “deficiency judgment” or difference between what you owed on your mortgage and what the bank sold it for at auction.

There was once upon a time when my credit card debt was so unbearable that I did think of giving up my house. Fortunately, I didn’t. I got help from AKPK free debt management program to help put my financial back on track again.

Are you thinking of putting your home on a short sale or have you already lost your home to a foreclosure? If so, read You Lost Your House – But You Still Have to Pay. You’ll think twice.

(CNNMoney.com) — As terrible as it is to lose your house to foreclosure, at least it’s a relief to put your biggest financial headache behind you, right?

Wrong.

Former homeowners may still be on the hook if there’s a difference between what they owed on their mortgage and what the bank could sell it for at auction. And these “deficiency judgments” are ticking time bombs that can explode years after borrowers lose their homes.

It can even happen to people who got their bank to approve them selling their home for less than it is worth.

Vanessa Corey, for example, short sold her Fredericksburg, Va., home in April 2008. She and her husband built the house in 2004, but setbacks, both personal (divorce) and professional (housing bust), made it impossible for the real estate agent to keep her home. So she negotiated the short sale and thought that was the end of it.

“My understanding was that the deficiency was negotiated away,” she said. “Then, last November, I got a letter from a lawyer telling me I owed my lender $65,000. I had to declare bankruptcy. There was no way I could pay it.” Read More »

How AKPK Debt Management Program Blogger Saves Money As Emergency Fund?

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Filed under AKPK Debt Management Plan, Credit Card Debts, Credit Cards, Debt Management Tips, Financial News & Updates, Free Debt Reduction Tips, Saving Money, Spending / Expenses

Question: My wife and I know we should have an emergency savings fund, but with one income we have nothing left to save after paying expenses.

But I’ve been thinking of a way to deal with this problem. We charge about $2,000 in monthly expenses to our credit cards, which we then pay in full each month.

My idea is this: Instead of paying off the cards every month, I’ll make only the minimum required payment and save the rest. Once I’ve accumulated a decent emergency fund, I would then begin paying down the cards. Do you think this is a good strategy? — N.G., California

Doesn’t this sound familiar to many people? It definitely sounds familiar to me. ;-)

There was once upon a time in 2007 that hubby and I were living on one income. Life was tough then because there’s so little income in hand, yet there were so many bills like car and home loan installments, term loans, and as many as 15 credit card payments waiting to be paid every month!

It’s very difficult to save for emergency fund after paying all the expenses because there was literally no money left at all!

But since hubby and I enrolled in AKPK debt management program and hubby started his full time teaching job, we have been able to save money as emergency fund.

If you are thinking of paying the minimum credit card payments and saving the rest as emergency fund until you have accumulated a decent amount of emergency fund to paying down the credit cards, well, it may/might never come true.

Financial experts say so. And I say so; I did what the reader above thought of doing and it didn’t work for me. It’s either you find extra money/income or cut down on expenses or do both if you want to save money as emergency fund.

I agree with Walter Updegrave, the author of the article of Big No-No for Building Emergency Savings that, “If you can’t save today because you have no money left after paying your expenses, how are you going to pay those expenses, plus come up with an extra $xxx a month to pay down the credit card balance you racked up to accumulate your emergency fund?

I also concur with him that it’s more practical to spend less than you make or cut down your expenses to save money.

Well, the reality is that there is only one way to save — and that’s to spend less than you make. There are a number of ways to do that. You can go the “cut the latte” route and avoid relatively small daily expenditures that add up. You can create a budget and then go over it line by line, looking for specific areas to squeeze. You can try two techniques that I’ve advocated in the past, focusing on big-ticket items or employing strategies that can effectively fool you into being a better saver. Whatever works for you. But one way or another, you’re going to have to find a way to pare your spending.

… But I also know that borrowing to save is an oxymoronic concept that’s more likely to create problems than solve them.