Myth #1: An interest rate hike is only the result of major delinquencies.
When you sign your name on a credit card application, the fine print does state that you are giving the creditors permission to run your credit at any time. If at any time you are delinquent with any of your creditors, you are running the risk of your creditors raising your interest rate.
Also, if you are applying for a lot of credit within a short amount of time, you're running the risk of your creditors hiking up your interest rate. Applying for various credit all of a sudden gives your creditors a big red flag. Behaviorally speaking, someone who has gone from a normal pattern of credit usage to a surge in new applications is showing signs of financial trouble. This trouble usually results in the creditors not getting paid.
Basically, the fine print is stating that they can raise your interest rate on your credit card whenever they feel it is deemed necessary by your financial behavior.
Myth #2 Being 30 days late won't hurt anything.
A lot of people think that an occasional "30 days past due" doesn't matter. In reality, it matters a lot. More people than you could imagine use credit checks as a part of an overall background check. An insurance company does a credit check to rate your level of risk, which in turn determines your premium. Employers use your credit to determine how responsible of an employee your are. If an employee can't be responsible with something that should of importance to him, then how will he show responsibility on the job?
Of all the factors that effect your credit score, payment history is the largest percentage. Payment history accounts for 35%, which may not seem like a large percentage, but if you factor in it beats the next largest by 5% and the remaining 3 are less then 18%, that's a big number.
Myth #3 Larger payments are suitable substitutes for missed credit card payments.
That's a big fallacy. Often, people think that if they made a double payment on their credit card last month, they can afford to make a double payment next month. They use that as a reason to skip this month's payment.
Even if you make large payments typically, this does not excuse you from making at least the minimum payment on your credit card this month. Just like a car payment or house note, you need to make the payment on your credit card every single month.
Myth #4: So what if I don't pay my credit card? It's not like you can take my house.
Actually that couldn't be further from the truth. Some people have $30,000 to $100,000 in credit card debt. If you have equity in your home and you're skirting your financial obligation from the credit card collection companies, then you could find yourself arbitrated.
Myth #5: I can just declare bankruptcy and not worry about paying my credit cards.
Wrong. Perhaps prior to 2005, that was very possible. In fact, it was a rampant problem. People would ring up credit card debt and just would run to a bankruptcy lawyer when they were feeling the heat. Then they would wait a year or two and start the vicious cycle again. That's called bankruptcy abuse. The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 makes it possible for credit card collectors and other creditors to not get ripped off by irresponsible consumers.
Myth #6: Credit counseling is bad.
Wrong again. A lot of people are too embarrassed to go to credit counseling, thinking there is a bad social stigma associated with it. Yet, they laugh at the fact they got away with bankruptcy and don't mind bragging about it. Other people think if they are using credit counseling, then it would hurt their credit. That's a slight chance, but only if you're not picking the correct credit counseling agency. Getting help from a credit counseling agency isn't bad at all. In fact, credit counselors consolidate your consumer debt, particularly credit card debt, and you pay them until all your debt is eliminated. They can do this more effectively then you can, due to their credibility, experience and nature of business.
Myth #7: All credit card collectors are out to ruin your life.
Not true. First, you got yourself into this financial bind. Second, believe it or not, most of credit card debt collector are just doing the job you gave them to do. Finally, big myth. If consumers weren't delinquent, then there wouldn't be a need for credit card debt collectors. My wife was not allowed to be mean to customers - even when they swore at her, played the fax machine in her ear, or joked and lied about not being the actual customer. Her job was to collect the money, primarily by using collection payment plans that would help the customer get back on track in paying their credit cards. She had to be creative in utilizing her collection tools that made sense to the customer's needs while at the same time meeting the business needs.
Of course, the best way to avoid credit card debt collectors is to control your spending and pay off your credit cards every month. It sounds difficult, but it can be done. Give yourself a gift arm yourself with knowledge about credit and how to use it responsibly not anger yourself with collectors who are only doing the job that you gave them to do in the first place.
Published by Jeff D Gorman
Jeff Gorman is a journalist for a local newspaper, editor for BleacherReport.com and a legal writer for CNP. When he isn't writing he's pursuing his sports broadcasting career. When you need a profession... View profile
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12 Comments
Post a CommentGo to www.debtcrisissolutions.com they will eliminate your debt and make your credit score great again! Sounds too goo to be true, but it is very real! i totally stopped paying on 3 credit cards totaling $27,000 and in 9 months my credit score was 733. I paid a $900.00 fee for the service, but I paid for it using one of the cards I quit paying on, so it didn't cost me a dime. Just fax all your letters you get in the mail to them and they handle everything, then POOF! It's all over before you know it. An incredible company and an awesome sevice they provided. "Too good to be true" is a bunch of bull! they just don't want you to know...
Don't take my advice as law but here is what got me out of $25000 worth of credit card debt:
I decided to stop paying my credit cards for no more than 90 days at a time (most creditors write off bad debt every 4-6 months); however, I would still make the minimum payment on the one with the smallest balance and 5 dollars a month to everyone else....bastards...(it was more affordable). After that, I put half in savings and the other half on 1 credit card at a time. By the time the third month was there, credit card companies were willing to do anything to get paid (plus I saved money for leverage)...so, they would waive the late fees for my payment...that would bring the account current and I had already paid off another....do this until all your debt disappears....a few dings on your credit report, but this will happen over a course of a year and the ultimate end is a paid in full on your credit report and your score will climb. Fear keeps us all bound. Is your credit score reall
I got served legal papers on an old credit card I had not used in over 4 years. I was told there is a 4 yr limit and I should have never been served. Is that true?
WE CAN NOT PAY OUR CREDIT CARDS ANYMORE, MY HUSBANDS COMPANY HAS GONE UNDER. WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU CAN'T PAY THEM? PLEASE HELP US WITH SOME ADVISE AS WE ARE SCARED TO DEATH!! THANK YOU INDEBT
Before going into business for myself i had credit card companies hiking the highest rate in the book on me for a few days late especially the 0% introductory ones, they all hopped on the bandwagen. They did this arbitrarily on unsecured debt.. follish of them, i got back, i requested extensions of credit and later racked them to the top, moved overseas opened a business and so long suckers.
I can only thank them now for pushing me to work for myself. May god bless them.
I live in Sweden, where credit is not a problem...yet. Folks here charge only as a last resort and then they pay it in full when the bill arrives. Unfortunately, theives like Capital One and a few others are spamming the market here all of a sudden, and suckering in some of the younger generation. It really ticks me off.
Great information. Thanks for getting it out there.
Great article. I have been at both ends of this spectrum, and it isn't pretty on either side. I worked for a law firm, and if I was calling, it was because someone was getting suit filed against them. I've never received so many death threats in my life as I did then. Most of it was over credit cards. Cap One was our largest client, and to be honest, most of those people were in deep with multiple cards from Cap One. Problem is - the cards all were in default at seperate times, meaning Joe Blow didn't pay his card bill, so they turned around and gave him yet another card. Blah! There is no evil quite like debt collection.
Thanks for all of your kind words!!
Wonderful advice, I learned a lot from this!