I keep hearing ads about how you have a legal right to settle a credit card with 10k or more in debt. I'm curious to know what this is, and are just a bunch of debt reduction companies looking for suckers.
I have one good friend who divorced his wife and after she hadn't been paying the cc for months when he thought she was, he was able to get a settlement, like 15k in debt down to 6 payments of 500 bucks. This was with BoA. Granted, once my friend found out, he worked with them, he himself was a debt collector at the time and was a nice guy so he pulled it off, just talking to them.
I am not behind on my bills, but I had over a year off unemployed where I needed the CCs as a fall back position. Before then I used to never carry a balance. I have about 20k in debt now, less than half a year's income. Since the start of the year I came up with a plan to get out of debt in 2 years, so I'm not quite halfway there yet, and I'm a bit behind. I consolidated some cards to a personal loan that I have been aggressively paying now to get ahead on the interest. I am on schedule on all my payments, occasionally I miss one by a day and am late, but I make them.
I still have 1 BoA card (used to be a small web bank, but BoA bought them a while ago), that is just above 10k. I am wondering if I can settle it. And what I have to do to do it.
I understand it is a blemish on the credit report, but I would be much better of without the interest that I have been paying on a 10k balance. My rates are decent, about 12%. But I just can't seem to knock this down, the interest keeps piling up and random bills keep popping up like fixing the car, and medical stuff.
I don't care if you think I'm scum or whatever for not wanting to pay my debts in full. Let's not get into personal judgements. At this point I am just exploring options. In these uncertain times anyone could lose their job tomorrow then hey then bankruptcy looks kinda fun. If you're a self-righteous naysayer, don't post in my thread. I don't want to turn this into a debate about banks and predatory lending practices. I just want information.
I just keep hearing these ads everywhere. What's the deal?
I have one good friend who divorced his wife and after she hadn't been paying the cc for months when he thought she was, he was able to get a settlement, like 15k in debt down to 6 payments of 500 bucks. This was with BoA. Granted, once my friend found out, he worked with them, he himself was a debt collector at the time and was a nice guy so he pulled it off, just talking to them.
I am not behind on my bills, but I had over a year off unemployed where I needed the CCs as a fall back position. Before then I used to never carry a balance. I have about 20k in debt now, less than half a year's income. Since the start of the year I came up with a plan to get out of debt in 2 years, so I'm not quite halfway there yet, and I'm a bit behind. I consolidated some cards to a personal loan that I have been aggressively paying now to get ahead on the interest. I am on schedule on all my payments, occasionally I miss one by a day and am late, but I make them.
I still have 1 BoA card (used to be a small web bank, but BoA bought them a while ago), that is just above 10k. I am wondering if I can settle it. And what I have to do to do it.
I understand it is a blemish on the credit report, but I would be much better of without the interest that I have been paying on a 10k balance. My rates are decent, about 12%. But I just can't seem to knock this down, the interest keeps piling up and random bills keep popping up like fixing the car, and medical stuff.
I don't care if you think I'm scum or whatever for not wanting to pay my debts in full. Let's not get into personal judgements. At this point I am just exploring options. In these uncertain times anyone could lose their job tomorrow then hey then bankruptcy looks kinda fun. If you're a self-righteous naysayer, don't post in my thread. I don't want to turn this into a debate about banks and predatory lending practices. I just want information.
I just keep hearing these ads everywhere. What's the deal?
