Debt Management Plans
Debt Management Plans (DMP) is placed one step beyond credit counseling and a
stone throw short of bankruptcy. If you are too deep into debt and unable to pay
them, a credit counseling agency may recommend Debt Management Plans. This is a
serious step that should be considered carefully along with better money
management skills and budgeting disciplines.
Similar to prescription medication that you would only take after consulting a
licensed physician, Debt Management Plans should start only after you have
talked it over with a certified credit counselor. Your certified credit
counselor spends the time to review your financial situation, consider
alternatives, and help you learn to handle money better. You want to stay out of
debt after you get out of it.
What is Debt Management Plans?
In simple terms, your credit counseling organization begins to manage your debts
on your behalf through direct interaction with your creditors. They come between
you and most of your unsecured creditors, negotiate lower interest rates,
eliminate certain fees, arrange payment amounts and prioritize which creditors
gets paid first. In short, almost everything that could be done to get you out
of debt fast. These plans cover most unsecured debts, like credit card bills,
student loans, and medical bills. But secured debts such as real estate loans
fall outside of these plans.
Before signing up with a credit counseling organization for a DMP, verify any
concessions your particular creditors offer to that organization. All these
concessions from your creditors amount to one thing: Lower your monthly payment
and still get out of debt faster. In some cases, you will be able to pay you
debts years earlier. Ask your credit counselor how much earlier you will get out
of debt if you stayed on course.
When DMP starts, you agree to send one monthly payment to the credit counseling
organization and they in turn make all the payments to your creditors for you.
In the meantime, you may have to agree not to use or apply for credit while you
are participating in the plan.
Is a Debt Management Plan Right For You?
Cover the following with your credit counselor before you decide to participate
in a Debt Management Plan.
Find out if there are other options besides DMP available to you. Is your DMP
handled by the same organization that also provides you assistance with money
and budget management during and after DMP? If Debt Management Plan is handled
by one organization and another handles your ongoing credit counseling, how will
you coordinate the two? Remember you want to stay out debt later.
Find out how enrolling in a Debt Management Plan impacts your credit and your
credit score. Negative and accurate information on your credit record is not
easy to remove despite any promises made.
Confirm what your monthly payment amount is and if you can afford it. Do not
commit to something you cannot follow through.
Credit counseling organization promises concessions they can get from your
creditors, such as lowering or eliminating interest charges and late fees.
Confirm these with your creditors and see if there is a waiting period before
these concessions kick in or do they start as soon as you enroll in a DMP.
Verify that your creditors are paid within the correct billing cycles and before
their required payment due date.
Clarify the steps involved in getting status report on your account from your
credit counseling organization. How often? How detail? Is it accessible by
phone? Any hesitancy on behalf of the credit counseling organization to let you
verify your account status is a big red flag that means you need to find another
organization to help you.
Find out if your creditors are willing to reset the clock on your past-due
accounts, wiping out the record of missed and late payments if you sign up with
a Debt Management Plan. This process is called re-aging your account. How many
payments should you make before your creditors are willing to do this?
What to do after Debt Management Plan starts?
Once you sign up with a Debt Management Plan continue to be active with the
process even though emotionally you may want to wash your hands away and stay
away. DMP does not relieve you of your responsibilities; it only helps you
manage it better.
Keep in touch with your creditors and pay your bills until DMP goes into effect.
If you havent had any negative entries in your credit report by now, any late
payments, late and penalties can still be entered into your credit report.
Contact your creditors and confirm that they have accepted the proposed Debt
Management Plan before you send any payments to the credit counseling
organization for your DMP.
Call each of your creditors on the first of every month to make sure the agency
has paid them on time and verify this by checking your monthly statements. Your
monthly statement should also reflect any changes in your interest rates,
waiving of the late fees and any other concessions you were expecting.
May you be granted freedom from debts both physical and Spiritually.
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counseling checkout FreeCreditReport.ws