Credit counseling and its
effects
By Jakob Jelling
www.cashbazar.com
All to often credit is fun, easy to
get and even easier to use. Many people find that even though they
have an excellent income, that they can not keep up with their current
debt load and even if they are managing to make their monthly payments
they are not getting ahead. Is there a solution to this situation
without having to claim bankruptcy or adversely effecting your credit
score?
Credit counseling may very well be
the answer for this type of situation. Credit counseling is designed
to help correct your problem without impacting your credit score and
may actually help improve your credit score. Credit counseling works
by ensuring that all of your creditors are getting paid on time,
eliminates the trap of revolving credit and helps you to learn to over
come your credit problems.
Upon entering into a
credit-counseling program you will be asked for financial details and
to surrender most of your credit cards. Almost all programs
acknowledge that you need a credit card or two for business or travel
and will not try to restrict your ability to work and live in a
reasonable fashion. Once your situation is assessed a plan will be
made so that your will be debt free in three or four years and you
will be offered the help you need to keep out of the situation that
you are currently in.
While your credit score will not be
effected an entry will be placed on your file. The entry on your file
will generally say "DMP" or "credit counseling".
This entry is put there to you from obtaining additional credit cards.
Once you have completed your credit counseling this entry is generally
removed or updated to reflect that you have finished the program.
One thing that will effect your
credit rating is the promptness of your credit-counseling agency. When
you are in a credit-counseling program you will give the agency a
monthly check that they will use to pay your creditors. If the agency
does not pay your creditors on time or in full your credit score will
be impacted. Be sure to check out the history of your
credit-counseling agency to avoid this.
As you might assume, committing to a
credit-counseling program does require a lot of work and conviction
from you. The hardest part for many people is to break the habit of
reaching for a credit card to pay for a bill that just came in the
mail. The second hardest thing for most people to do is to learn to
live within in their means. Everyone likes instant gratification and
often we feel entitled to it, but perhaps if we had shown a little
more discipline in the first place we wouldn't need credit counseling
now.
As you can see, credit counseling is
a good and reasonable option if you find yourself with too much debt.
Credit counseling will not effect your credit score and will
ultimately make you a better person as you will learn better skills
for handling your money. If you find yourself slipping into revolving
credit card debt problems make sure you take the correct steps to
resolve the problem before you are forced into bankruptcy.
About the
author
Jakob Jelling is the founder of http://www.cashbazar.com.
Visit his website for the latest on personal finance, debt
elimination, budgeting, credit cards and real estate. |