Hello all. I hope this is an appropriate place to pose my lengthy and long-winded dilemma and first question. I'm a freelance graphic designer, and after years of not enough work and falling further behind, using credit cards to pay for 2 hospital stays, for cash advances to pay my rent, to pay my card payments, I've reached a point where I owe $48,000, credit is maxxed out, payments have doubled, can't find enough work to pay both rent and cards, and I have to make a decision in the next few days - bankruptcy, debt mgmt program, or settlement. I still have decent credit and get 0%APR offers weekly, but only for $3-4000 limits, which won't help me enough. The hardest part is that my work situation is so sporadic - wks/mos. go by when I can't find work - I'm extremely concerned about getting locked in to a longterm monthly payment program. (When I do get work, I make good money) One further consideration is that I'd like to keep my lower balance BankofAmerica visa, and just consider relief from the other 3, but I don't know if this is a good idea...
I have virtually no assets - a '93 car, a '97 computer, an old motorcycle and some furniture. I have a small ebay and web biz income of less than 2k/yr.
This week I've begun reading about options, searching the web and came upon this excellent forum with real people - not lawyers.
I haven't fully read what's involved in filing bankruptcy, the ramifications and repercussions and expense - that's next. I downloaded the BankruptcyManual2 pdf. I got several "non-profit" Debt Mgmt firms from the US gov'ts Consumer Credit Counseling 800 number to figure me a program
Yesterday I found out for the first time about "Settlement", got a consultation and program written up, and I'm writing to ask if any of you folk have personal first-hand experience with Settlement ?
As many of you know, Settlement involves opening a bank acct and giving a Settlement law firm the money you'd pay your creditors, or less - an amount you agree you can pay each month. You stop making card payments and let your accounts go delinquent, they change your address and phone to their Texas office where wages can't be garnishee'd and theoretically, collectors won't bother you. They say they'll take over all correspondance with creditors, fight judgements, send out cease and desist letters. Then after at least 6 mos, when you've started to build up a balance in the bank acct and Chase and the others want to bargain, they negotiate a settlement for 25-30 % of your debt, making the banks agree to a paid in full, $0 balance condition for your acct and your monthly payments go to them until you've paid it off. You pay more, they settle sooner.
So far I've got these Pro's and Con's -
PRO's:
- Savings on Principle and interest in tens of thousands of $$'s.
- Pays off your new "settlement" debt in full in 3-4 years on avg
- Somewhat sticks it to the banks who've been gouging me with 29.99% APR for years and probably already got back their actual loan.
CON's:
- $2800 of your first few months deposits goes straight to them, and $1000's more of your mo. payments over the years in fees ($6k for me)
- You have to hide from collectors and bank reps for years - (i'm certain savvy collectors will find me and call me regardless of phone and address switch) so you have to screen calls for the duration (not a problem for me)
- Credit is damaged like bankruptcy ( but can rebound I'm guessing)
Did I overlook something important / misunderstand / leave something out? Your thoughts? Thanks if advance for taking the time to offer your advice.
I have virtually no assets - a '93 car, a '97 computer, an old motorcycle and some furniture. I have a small ebay and web biz income of less than 2k/yr.
This week I've begun reading about options, searching the web and came upon this excellent forum with real people - not lawyers.
I haven't fully read what's involved in filing bankruptcy, the ramifications and repercussions and expense - that's next. I downloaded the BankruptcyManual2 pdf. I got several "non-profit" Debt Mgmt firms from the US gov'ts Consumer Credit Counseling 800 number to figure me a program
Yesterday I found out for the first time about "Settlement", got a consultation and program written up, and I'm writing to ask if any of you folk have personal first-hand experience with Settlement ?
As many of you know, Settlement involves opening a bank acct and giving a Settlement law firm the money you'd pay your creditors, or less - an amount you agree you can pay each month. You stop making card payments and let your accounts go delinquent, they change your address and phone to their Texas office where wages can't be garnishee'd and theoretically, collectors won't bother you. They say they'll take over all correspondance with creditors, fight judgements, send out cease and desist letters. Then after at least 6 mos, when you've started to build up a balance in the bank acct and Chase and the others want to bargain, they negotiate a settlement for 25-30 % of your debt, making the banks agree to a paid in full, $0 balance condition for your acct and your monthly payments go to them until you've paid it off. You pay more, they settle sooner.
So far I've got these Pro's and Con's -
PRO's:
- Savings on Principle and interest in tens of thousands of $$'s.
- Pays off your new "settlement" debt in full in 3-4 years on avg
- Somewhat sticks it to the banks who've been gouging me with 29.99% APR for years and probably already got back their actual loan.
CON's:
- $2800 of your first few months deposits goes straight to them, and $1000's more of your mo. payments over the years in fees ($6k for me)
- You have to hide from collectors and bank reps for years - (i'm certain savvy collectors will find me and call me regardless of phone and address switch) so you have to screen calls for the duration (not a problem for me)
- Credit is damaged like bankruptcy ( but can rebound I'm guessing)
Did I overlook something important / misunderstand / leave something out? Your thoughts? Thanks if advance for taking the time to offer your advice.
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