If
you are in debt, your number one priority should be to work through a
consolidation service to achieve the best possible debt settlement. A debt
settlement will allow you to pay off creditors with money you receive in one
large disbursement while simultaneously salvaging your credit rating.
That
sounds easy enough, but what is the process to consolidate your debt? It's a
little more complicated.
You
should start by asking your creditor to eliminate or reduce interest carried
forward or brought forward.
In
many instances, debtors do not ask creditors for help and end up in the
following trap: the creditors first raise the equated monthly emoluments--most
of which comes from increased interest rates. When the debtor can't pay off the
increased interest rate, he is forced to pay a penalty.
The
actual dollar amount of the penalty will be negligible, but with his
already-spiraling debt, the burden of those extra few dollars needlessly added
will significantly add to his mental burden.
If
this is your position, you need to take control and begin to eliminate your
interest and penalty immediately. Once you do this, your creditor will
reciprocate by giving you the benefit of the doubt, since he is no longer at
risk of losing his principal.
Your
next step is to consolidate all your credit card accounts by converting them
into a single payment instrument--a single bill.
After
you calculate the average interest applied to more than one credit card account
debt, you can apply the formula for the consolidated credit card account to
repay the optimum (lowest interest rate) amount only, thus reducing the average
interest rate.
To
make things even better, you will be able to fix your credit history by paying
off all of your creditors immediately. Once the amount you receive is
distributed among your creditors, you will slowly begin to recover as each
creditor cancels your debt. The participating creditors will both help you
recover your credit and make your repayment easier and further their interests
by
recovering a principle amount that was almost sure to end up as a write-off.
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