Identifying The Initial Steps To Paying Back Your Debts

September 15th, 2009 by andredennis1990

Debt troubles are causing untold misery for more and more of us, and levels of personal debt are at their steepest ever. Many of us want to get started on paying off our debts, but the task can look overwhelming. There are, nonetheless a number of effective techniques you can make use of to get started on the track to a debt free future,

Firstly, it's essential to take a look at your expenditure and rein it in whenever feasible. There's not much point in trying to pay off debts with one hand while the other is at work chalking up new borrowing. Make a commitment to stop using your credit cards except as only a way of shopping, always paying back everything you've spent when your statement arrives. Also look at economising on your day-to-day spending - purchasing cheaper brand names, relinquishing the occasional treat or social event, it all helps.

But this on its own will not do a great deal to clear your debt - you need a program to reduce it as soon as possible, and this is where the concept of 'snowballing' applies. Fundamentally, you put all your attention on clearing one debt as quickly as you can, putting all your spare money into this effort while maintaining your other debts at their minimum repayment levels. Once this main debt has been cleared, add the monthly repayments you'd been making on it to the payments on the next debt in the queue. This way, the potency of your money gets higher and higher as it moves on from one debt to the next.

If you're having extreme problems keeping up with your repayments, however, the previous two tactics aren't going to avoid disaster. It's now that consolidation might be a useful choice. The underlying idea is to take out a new line of credit, and use it to repay all your present debts. The idea is that servicing your new single loan will be more affordable than the total fees, interest and charges of your earlier debts, and so more of your money will go towards clearing what you owe rather than just standing still paying the interest.

You really need to tread cautiously with this last choice though, as you're potentially adding to your debt problems rather than alleviating them. Make sure you have the self-discipline to clear your old debts and not bulid them up again before going down this path.

None of these alternatives are easy, and none are without their drawbacks and dangers. However, most of us accept now that debt levels are too high and we need to start doing something to bring them down to more sensible levels, whatever the short term pain that might be involved. By taking these suggestions and making use of them, you can make that first stride towards becoming debt free.

Walking Possession Agreement

Illegal Credit Card Agreements - Unenforceable?

August 31st, 2009 by andredennis1990

Considering that credit card debts are causing such financial worries for UK financial services customers, it’s no suprise that thousands of people are looking for any conceivable way to clear these debts.

The most common ways are the old standbys of debt consolidation loans and management programs, with possibly insolvency as a last resort. Of late, however, there’s a new buzz in town when it comes to clearing credit card debts: the illegal credit card agreement ‘loophole’.

The basic idea is to take advantage of a loophole in the law that means that unless a credit agreement follows a list of rigorous regulations, then it is invalid and so cannot be implemented legally. The effective outcome is that any debts built up under such agreements cannot be pursued by collectors, and so doesn’t need to be repaid. There are lots of outfits claiming that they are able to quickly and easily arrange for your debts to be written off in this way, but is this really true?

The first thing to consider is that only financial documents arranged before April 2007 have any chance of being declared unenforceable under this method. If this is the case, there are quite a few reasons why the agreement may be invalidated, including not being signed by both parties, the Annual Percentage Rate not being distinctly stated, or copies of the original documents not being available on asking for them.

Specialist solicitors will examine your agreements on your instruction to decide if they are all enforceable. But here comes the problem: you usually have to pay a charge before an expert will even consider your case, whether or not you have any chance at all of clearing your debts. If you have a lot of agreements to check, this can make it an expensive and maybe fruitless exercise.

You should also consider that some less dependable suppliers of these services over-egg the chances of actually being successful, which many impartial commentators say are not as high as they are being described.

So what’s the deal here? By all means ask your credit card issuers for replicas of your credit agreements and examine them yourself, but before taking any further action have a word with a debt advice charity. If you think you might have an invalid agreement, then find a company prepared to work on a no win no fee basis, rather than parting with cash upfront in the possibly useless hope of freeing your self from your debt worries.

Source: Write Off Credit Cards