How to Deal with Bill Collectors when You have No Means to Pay
86How to deal with creditor when you have no money is very easy. You can't give what you don't have. Now that said, very few people have no money, they simple don't have enough money to meet the necessities of life, and pay their creditors at the same time.
What I am going to say here will not be what your used to hearing on this subject, as I consider myself a bit of a guerrilla when it comes to the predatory nature of the lending business. I am of the opinion that it is morally wrong to lend money in order to profit. Particularly to the class of people who are most likely to borrow to begin with. Enough of my political views.
Here is how I have done things in the past and the results, and how I believe this should be handled by anyone facing this situation. You will find that many of our nations most prestigious families and personages have handled it this very way as well. (Look up Neil Bush the Presidents brother) That is why they are wealthy, and 95 percent of everyone else is not.
First, take care of your health, nutrition, and well being. Without your health you have nothing period. Therefore, there is no point in stressing as if you starve you will be dead and that is that. Your children are more important than your debts, you should not ever sacrifice them for a blood sucker. Really this should be a no brain-er.
With what money you have, take care of your nutritional needs, then health (Proper clothing for the environment) and medical, followed by shelter. In that order, you have to have food to live, shelter is a nicety. Everything after that is a luxury.
Now once you have had your dinner, and the kiddo's are fat and happy, and a roof over your head, you have a few extra dollars left over what do you do next. Good question, the money changers who control the media and most of our popular thinking will promptly tell you to start paying your debs, no matter how little you have to pay.
That is a great way to remain a slave and never get anywhere. The funny thing is people who have never been in this situation will give you the party line and tell you to work with them and do whatever and bend over funny how they become programmed to assist the well to do at the expense of someone else.
No you are the customer of the creditor not the other way around and guess what the customer is always right. People's collective attitude about debt repayment is so ingrained it reminds me of the story of the gorilla's in the cage.
It goes something like this, there are five Gorillas in a cage and a bundle of banana's are lowered into the center and as soon as a Gorilla goes for the bananas they are all promptly sprayed by cold water. This scenario is repeated until the gorillas no longer go for the bananas. Now over time one of the gorillas is replaced with a new gorilla. When the new guy goes for the bananas the other gorillas attack him until he no longer goes for the the bananas, this process is repeated until none of the original gorillas are left. At which point no gorilla is left that knows why you don't eat the bananas but they all know not to touch the bananas.
So back to what to do with your disposable income. First and foremost you must pay yourself. That means you pay yourself before you pay any creditor. You owe the fruits of your labor to yourself before you owe it to anyone else.
So simply put give yourself the first 200 dollars or 10% of your gross pay if you make more than minimum wage, of your disposable income before anyone else gets paid.
This is necessary for many reasons here are a few: You need to have an emergency fund to buy food and other necessities if you find yourself with no income again. This will take the stress out of the next lean period, there will be another one, there always is. Second you have to make a choice to be a slave and give over your fruits to a master or be your own person and to do that you have to pay yourself first. It was your work not theirs.
So, you say, "MoneyGuy what do I do about my debts what about my credit rating what about the debt collectors", well let's take this in order.
First the last thing you should care about is your credit rating, if you are in debt the last thing you need is more debt. Very simple, think of it as insurance to help prevent you from getting into debt in the future. Little hint, they only make money if money is loaned so don't worry the blood suckers will be back with plenty of credit offers after a couple of years and your assets are built back up.
Second, the debt collectors, IGNORE them. That is correct, throw the letters in the trash and don't answer the phone. They have only one mission in life and that is to get what ever they can, however small or large that amount may be. Don't believe a damn thing they say (They aren't going to take any legal action or whatever crapola they say, it will cost them way more than the debt itself and they have an obligation to the bottom line). Check out this Hub to see how debt collections work to learn more.
Third, about the debts, This is simple since you have defaulted the bank or credit institution that loaned you money has two recourse's, if the loan is secured they repossess the property that secured the loan and that settles the bill.
Again consider this a blessing as you obviously have something you cannot afford and most assuredly don't need. Change your paradigm if you must in order to accept that.
If the loan is unsecured, they can pester the hell out of you if you let them by calling and letter writing and whatever. Other than that after 6 months they write it off. Sure they will pile on some late fees and what not but who cares at the six month point it is done it will be whatever it is.
You still will not pay that amount. They will turn it over to a collection agency who will try to collect whatever they can and split that amount with the original debt owner. Here is where your savings comes in. Once you have a full six months of living money saved up(Your emergency stash not to be spent unless an emergency).
Your savings now goes to clearing your debt. Once you have about 50% of one of your debts saved up write the collector that owns that debt offer a settlement of about 25% of the amount.
They will do one of two things they will accept your offer or they will counter offer, anything at 50% or less take the offer, get it in writing and settle the debt.
Don't I repeat don't give in for anything more than 50%. Build up your savings again and repeat process until all debts are settled. I Repeat do not use an agency or any other scammer service to help you. They wouldn't be doing it if there wasn't profit to be made.
Upon settling of your debts continue your debt free life. Continue sticking 10% back for your future, stick another 10% back for future purchases (Cars and Homes) pay cash. Lastly stick 10% back for gotchas like tires and appliances. This will prevent you from being forced into not having the cash when these little realities crop up.
Some people may be skeptical or critical of this advice as they are deeply programmed to assist the system extract the max profit from the working class. To those people allow me to give a little lesson on Banking in this Hub. I hoped this helps those in need out.
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I wonder what the point is in paying them anything after they have sent you debts to collections. From experience, I know that once it is written off, they have already recieved their money and you credit is still screwed. From a realitor herself and other sources, paying after the debt has been sent to collections is stupid.
The ding will stay on your record regardless and you just threw your money away. I have also tried negotiating, especially with my car. Wachovia wouldn't give me more than a chuckle on thit one. I tried to settle with 5000 instead of 7000 but they insisted on all of it and my car was repo'ed.
I told WaMu to go f- themselves for "them" tacking on all these charges for a three dollar overcharge that was incurred by them and thier fees for whatever. They didn't send me any notice and wouldn't reverse the charges, so after another 200 bucks of crap, just money because they felt like it, I told them to go f themselves. :)
I even asked them what they expected me to do. I had never made a late payment or missed a payment in years, I even had that credit protection on all my credit cards and even after explaining that I am unemployed, divorced and I need to take care of my kid and put a roof over our heads first, they so "sincerely" replied. "I am sorry for that but we need you to make a payment."
So after that I realized that all those extra fees to help you when something goes wrong was a bunch of crap and not worth it to anyone!!! Plus the media really like to paint people like me in a bad way. They don't ask why you took out credit cards.
If they asked me I would tell them. I used my credit cards to pay utility bills and buy food just to get by because everything is so friggin expensive. They make it look like people who take out credit cards are out buying crap they don't need when only about 1% of all my credit card debt went to things other than bills and food and that 1%, clothes for my kid.
Nice world we live in!!!
nice info
Great Hub TMG, valuable information for sure! Glad you published this it will no doubt be a great tool to refer to for those who are in a sticky situation.
Wow, I've never read an article so committed and sure. I've never heard of doing these things, either. I have no doubt that these suggestions will the perfect advice for many!
Darn! There goes my dreams of becoming a spy. lol :)
Great hub money guy - I wonder if we have the same rules etc here in Australia? must find out...cheers
Thanks TMG - it is a good place to live ........ cheers
Good stuff! I agree that a crappy cedit record is better in the long run. It may be tough when things are tight but it works out well when you learn to manage your finances - increasing earning power and living within your (growing) means! Consumer debt is a disaster!
The only time debt is good is when it serves as leverage to increase your earning power but then it has to be done with a healthy amount of common sense.
Wow. I have been wanting to do this for at least the past three years. I know I have paid Citi back at least 50 times since my divorce seven years ago and after losing my banking job (hallelujah on that by the way) I feel like I am shooting myself in the foot every time I send in another payment. Thanks for this hub, it was just the push I needed. My partner did this three years ago and he owed four times what I do, and so far nothing, I mean nothing, has happened.
If they send me to the slammer I may call you though, at least just to say, oops. (o:
I think there are a lot of people who can use this advice-- and sadly there are going to be more and more as the layoffs escalate. Credit card companies are worse than the mafia these days with 33% intrest, late fees and fine print that is totally off the wall. Good work Moneyman!
Thanks for giving us all some financial balls. An early Christmas and New Year's present!!! Great hub, TMG, MM
LOL! I may take you up on that!
Seriously, I'm going to see an attorney, but my sense is that it's probably a waste to spend the money on bankruptcy. Bill & I want to get married, but (this is so screwed up) we have to know what they can and can't do to us if we marry our debts. If we marry and end up losing our house, well, better to live in sin and have a roof over our heads. If we marry and they start attaching property, that's bad too. If we marry and we need to file bankruptcy and our combined incomes give us a larger monthly payment under Chapter 11 (13?--you know, the one where you pay back a portion), then its better if I file alone maybe since my income currently sucks.
I don't have health insurance, so if we marry I'll get some through his job (assuming he doesn't lose it soon, which, if Detroit goes down, he might).
Things are SO screwed up right now in this country. I'm NOT a slacker and neither is he, and neither of us spend money like we have it. We both acquired debt from marrying the wrong people and staying married to those people way too long before saying OMG and bailing. He refused to pay his marital debt (most of which he didn't know existed) immediately after his divorce, I tried for seven years to pay mine, but I've had it at this point. I'm 55, I just lost my job, and I live in Michigan. I 'll NEVER be able to pay that debt off now, not if I live to be 120. Plus I hate Citi. I really do. Having seen the inside of banking, I'm so disgusted at this point I don't know who I'm more angry at--them or myself.
Then there's the medical mess. I know people who have had to get divorced to avoid losing their home to medical debt. They still love each other, they live together, but the whole financial systen is so FUBAR that people make these personal decisions that look insane on the surface because of the underlying financial crap. I think it's really, reallly messed up.
Thanks for the advice. I'm thinking pretty soon here, Citi & friends will be so overhwhelmed with defaults no amount of bailout money will save them. I wouldn't cry if that happened. I'll have the same amount of nothing no matter who goes down, so let it rip, I say. (o:
Great hub, TMG! Many thanks.
BTW, I don't think its "heartless" to abolish all medical insurance. The third-party payment system, especially Medicare, is the primary driving force behind spiralling costs. My wife's OB/GYN no longer accepts any third-party payments and he's lowered his fees since he doesn't have to devote so much of his practice to paperwork and compliance issues.
To PGrundy, "we have to know what they can and can't do to us if we marry our debts. If we marry and end up losing our house".
When my husband and I got married, we wanted to keep our finances separate. I had debt and he didn't. I got rid of my debt, including a judgement, and we were financially fine for about 15 years. Meanwhile, the credit card companies offered us cards. We each got cards, and the other didn't sign the app. I found out after he died, that was a smart thing, as a lawyer told me that I would not be liable for credit card debt that only he signed for. (I live in Ohio and don't know if this is state-specific.) That helped with the $40k of debt he had accumulated due to his disability and cancer for five years before he died.
Another thing we had done five years before he died was to establish a living trust. We put our condo and cars in the trust. That way, when my creditors filed judgements against me after I ignored them for five years, they were unable to attach the cars or house because the titles are not in my name.
In summary, check with a local lawyer to find out if the creditors can only come after you for your debt. See about putting your home in a trust. Mine is a living trust, but a more secure type of trust is a pure trust, which will cost more.
TheMoneyGuy, how can I get rid of the judgements, and is there a chance they will accept a percentage, or just let the whole amount ride while they collect exorbitant interest rates ad infinitum until I cough up the total?
TMG, this is a great hub.
Can you do this with private student loans?
Thanks so much. You have given me hope.
Great advice TMG!! Very timely, and as always, Very Well Thought Out Hub!!
Excellent information.
Far too many cannot step far enough back to see that if you are in debt up to your eyeballs the last thing you need to worry about is your credit score.
Learn to be frugal, stash your cash or store it in something else of value ( banks don't want hundred pound bags of rice and beans ), and go enjoy life.
If you are single and enjoy fishing, grab a pole and go live on the river for a while. There is no reason at all to feel remorse or guilt for defaulting on a loan to a bank.
Personally, I love getting calls from debt collectors. Why? Because at that point I know that the purported original creditor ( who more often than not loaned you nothing, wrote that nothing off, and then got reimbursed for it as well ) has signed off on it and the debt collector is a third party interloper who can be scared off quite easily with a bit of legal sorcery.
Again, great, practicle, spot on advice.
Thanks for the information. Now if we could only get poeple to actually do this.
Savings Queen
Thanks so much for the advice. It really helps to hear from someone in this situation. Being a student who just graduated from a prestigious school (in student loan debt already) and am unable to find a job (of course, in this economy) in California right now means I am unable to pay off my immediate credit debt. I keep trying to tell creditors there is no way to pay off debt right now, but they don't get it. It's nice to know people like you exist.
Hi TMG,
I found this website because I am just so upset. I am 21 years old and I have three credit cards that are way over the limit and I do not have a job and I am getting married in August, so you can see I have a lot on my plate. Now my question concerns the lawsuits that the collector companies are threatening me with by mail, and they are calling my family's home, even though I do not live there. I had been paying off my credit cards like a good little borrower up until I moved to Florida and lost my job, my fiance works for minimum wage and we have other more important bills that need attention, so I could not continue to pay them. The last three payments I made simultaneously to each credit card went through as far as I was concerned and then I received letters that two of the credit card companies didn't accept my payments, lord knows why. So after that blow I just gave up. I had already spent what money I had left securing ourselves a place to live and couldn't repay them. I am terrified at this point. I have been searching for a job for 8 months and I have also owed my cards for the past 8 months and as I said I was sent to collections. I do not know what to do, I thought about finally calling them in an attempt to tell them 'look I do not have a job and I can't pay' so if they do take me to court at least they cannot say I didn't mention anything. Please ease my fears. I am so worried because I have a clean record and I want to keep my future. Thank You. Christina
TMG,
Thank You. I am going to do that right now. : )
I am so glad that I found your hubs, so much common sense and useful information.
Great hub.thanks for all the info,you helped me a bunch!
Money Guy ... it was no surprise to hear that you are an insurance agent, as your stements go on for paragraphs before you make your point and your point is misguided. I bet you feel that variable life policies are a great investment as they "protect you" from the principal amount (the amount the owner pays) is guaranteed over the life of the policy - with expense charges of 4 to 6% (read pays broker high commissions) for selling expensive, poor performing investments.
Awesome hub. Thanks for the insight! I'm sure we're going to be seeing a lot more debt collection in the coming year due to the economic downturn!
Nice Hub I think it will help some people.
You boosted my lost confidence....
Thank you for the useful info. You mention writing a letter if you don't want the collection calls but rather have them in writing; do you have a sample letter of what you you would write?
Wasn't late on any payments. Transfer my property to my parents. Three months later lost my job, and no longer could pay my bills.
Now after eleven months. One of my creditors wants to sue me. Can they take my parents property away from them if I wasn't in trouble with my bills. When this transfer took place.
They went to my parent house to give me a court summit. Don't live there anymore. Do they have to give me summit before a judgment in court can be made, or do they just get a default judgment against me.
By the way owe back taxes too. Had a drinking problem, and now have been sober for 1 year. Do taxes come before bill collectors.
So i have a bunch of the debt like everyone else. I have two credit cards that I have been paying off, they are still current. Two other credit cards that are in collections and student loans up the ying yang.
For one of my collections credit cards. I was contacted by a law firm of forster and garbus. I recieved a summons from them, but when i called i was told that if i made a payment of $500 minimum, that it wouldn't go to court. I made the payment and have been making $100 payments every month. I called recently to find out what my balance was and was shocked to find that it was only $500 less than what i was told my original balance was though i had made a total of $2200 in payments. Well it turns out that a judgment was entered in two months after I had spoken to them and after i had been making payments. Tey tacked on the the lawyers fees to my total debt. If they hadn't lied to me i would have gone to court. This was my first dealings with a collections agency. It turns out that i don't even have an agreement entered and the guy who was originally assigned my case, no longer works for them. I feel like i was out rightly lied to.These people are so underhanded.
In any case i currently am in the unfortunate position where i am no longer working and my unemployment has been suspended because of a shady boss. I should so report him to the board and have his license revoked for all the disgusting things he does....but that's another story.
Since i can't pay my debts at the moment, can i just write them and let them know. Also, can i do anything about having been lied to by the collections agency?
I used to make in excess of $120K per year, now down to under $40K. Lots of credit card bills, in excess of $100K. One bank sent me a letter, will accept $4K on a $25K credit card, wish I had the money, but don't. Some others that we owe $5K on will only knock off $1K, weird. Anyway I have been just hanging up when they call, I used to try and talk to them, only to get agitated, now after the hang-ups, at least I don't get any more head aches. I am gonna take your advice and write a letter, still don't like the phone calls, can be embarrassing at times. Thanks for a great post.
My husband and I are both on disability and have health problems. What I want to know is how can I pay medical bills or what do I say to them when we have two weeks of the month without money for gas,food, anything. They don't want to see us without getting a payment. If we pay the doctors what we should pay them, then we don't have the funds to pay for the medicines. I am so frustrated and don't know what to do...yes, there are indigent programs, but it takes gas to get there, go to the doctors, and then the refills...you can't call anymore with one of them because the health care provider has to do it. The receptionist says they don't do it; so I explain that I have called and that it wouldn't let me order it....it is such a hassle. They tell us to go to Needline (a place that gives you food if you qualify for food stamps...we make $5 too much to get food stamps. I don't know if you understand what I'm asking but I do appreciate your "listening". God bless you!
if you have a bill with the collectors but i don't live in the usa anymore? what would you do theMoneyGuy?
I have had bad credit since I was 18 (they really ought to not give credit cards to teenagers). I am probably wrong, but I had thought that it takes seven years for something to come off of your credit report? I ask because things were almost at that seven year point and I decided to go to a comunity college last year, and am still going. The issues is last summer through an MRI they found two masses in my brain, so now I am working full time, going to school full time, and have mounting medical bills. The perscriptions to keep my head from killing me are eating up what little bit of money I have. I know that Colllege loans that are defaulted will be garnished from your wages, but what of the medical bills? Advice and insight would be mich appreciated.
i had a medical problem and had 4 mri's paid most off then set up a payment arrangement never missed one payment then one day i came home and was summed to court. i called the debt department and they said they do this when you have the last two payments... i said you have got to be kidding me. and, said that i always paid my payment 2 weeks before the due date. i was told that didn't matter. now i have to pay court costs and the bill that only had two payments left.i will die before i ever have another test. ms or not!this just doesn't seeem legal to me.
Whats up wise man. Wish I woulda known this couple years ago. Any way my credit it already f***ed but I want to purchase a house some day what then. One other question can they take ur tax rebate for credit debt. I owe ten gs on a car that they repoed they are saing they are getting a judgement then they garnish wages and tax returns right? My buddy had a car his payment was 300 a month they got a judgement to garnish wages and now they are takin 250 a week! What's up wit that thanks money guy
What about if a judgment has already been awarded against me? If a lien has been placed against me? Also, what about student loans that I'm unable to repay?
I was hit by a car driven by a guy that had an expired license and no liability insurance. I was in my green lighted crosswalk,and he hit and injured me. The first 2 lawyers said there was no insurance company to get so it nowhere and it wouldn't be worth their time/ they could not do it on contingency and I have no money or health insurance either.The D.A. in California won't do anything to help because he wasn't drunk and he didn't flee the scene. He just didn't pay attention the fact I was in th lighted crosswalk and it was my right away.The police report was on my side,but I don't have the money to sue him,so he goes on,driving around after hitting me and gets away with,and I am stuck with Collection agencies after me for something I didn't cause..I am too poor,and am not old enough for Medi-care either. California makes it easy on the bad people to get away with hitting pedestrians,especially if the driver hits a poor person..
CORRECTION: Actually it was a suspended license.. that makes a difference..
I got a summons to appear in court for credit card debt. What can the courts do to make me pay? I live in Pennsylvania so the garnishments dont worry me. Nothing is in my name so that doesnt bother me. What else can they do? Im really afraid I'll end up in jail for contempt for not paying these debts.
GOD HAVE MERCY, They made me to missed out the Iphone 4s plan because I can't do anything now, one just being removed coz the 5 years has finish and all this been managing myself well, got everything I want but not Iphone, but now i have to pay it coz i need money from the bank and i promise to pay it.
I have read many accounts of people (who live in Florida) who have owed medical debt and judgements were placed by the courts. One lady owed a hospital a little over $800 (so apparently collectors do sue and will even go after the smaller amounts as well as large medical bills. A lot of people claimed that the money was taken directly from their bank accounts and did not realize until after the fact that the court allowed collector to seize bank account funds.
I just don't see how they can go in and take the entire amount due from a bank account when a wage garnishment is only a percentage. One lady said that her husband and daughter are on the same bank account, but that did not stop the money from being seized.
Supposedly in Florida they are not supposed to seize from joint accounts. The account was all of their bill money and nothing more, but collector got it all.


























tourmaline2777 3 years ago
Great Hub and terrific answer MoneyGuy!