Your Monthly Credit Card Debt Payments; What Happens If You Cannot Make Them? How Do You Eliminate Credit Card Debt?

By Matthew Highlander

Are you anxious about the prospect of not being able to pay that credit card debt?

Are you having trouble paying your bills? Is your credit card debt piling up with increased interests rates and late fees? Have your minimum payments been increased?

Has bankruptcy crossed your mind? How else can you eliminate credit card debt?

Your financial problems may be the result of a job loss, a catastrophic illness, a death in the family, a failed business venture, or just the simple mismanagement of finances. Whatever the cause of your credit card debt problems, you can avoid despair and worse case thinking about court action or bankruptcy with some primary education about unsecured credit card debt.

According to the Credit Card Debt Survival Guide, it is important to understand the realities of credit card debt collection. If your account is in arrears, it is one of millions of accounts in arrears. In the last 12 months, eight percent of American adults (18 million people) have been late making a credit card payment and have missed a payment entirely, according to creditcards.com. If you account is sold to a junk debt buyer, it is one of tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands sold in a package of junk debt for ten cents on the dollar or less.

The credit card companies must budget for bad debt per Federal Reserve regulations. Their planning assumes a certain percentage of consumers will not pay their credit card debt. Then, the credit card debt collectors who end up with those debts assume there are two kinds of consumers; those who do not resist their collection efforts or do so ineffectually and those few who do resist and know how toeliminate credit card debt.

There are millions of charged off credit card accounts and each is only worth pennies per dollar. If you cannot afford to pay your credit card debt, your safety and security are in those numbers. If you challenge a debt collector properly, they will simply move onto the majority of delinquent account holders ready to surrender. Debt collection agencies and attorneys can be very profitable, if they only collect on 50 percent of assigned or purchased accounts.

An understanding of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, your state's consumer protection laws and, if needed, your local court's rules of civil procedure will make it possible to turn away debt collectors. - 32519

About the Author:

Sign Up for our Free Newsletter

Enter email address here