Debt Settlement in Michigan
by Michael
Today, the Detroit Free Press ran an article about how consumers have the option to negotiate a reduced balance pay off with creditors (debt settlement). Read the full article here: Debt Settlement in Michigan
I was interviewed by the reporter for the story, as was a CRN member who was quoted in the article. The article gave some good advice, but I would like to expand on it. The article correctly stated many companies “have taken outrageously high upfront fees — as much as 13% to 20% of your debt”. The average fee charged by most settlement companies is 15% of the debt you ask them to settle for you.
The CRN member quoted in the article settled $35,000.00 of debt for $12,000.00 by implementing the tools and following the guidance she received as a CRN member. Had she hired a typical settlement company to settle her debt she would have paid an average of $5,250.00 in upfront fees. However, as the Detroit Free Press article stated, she paid CRN just $1,200.00 to do the same thing. Would it really have been the same thing though? Not hardly!
If you hire the typical settlement company, you’ll find:
- By paying high upfront fees before the company achieves any real substantive results for you, you are prolonging your success, and often dramatically reducing your odds of achieving any success at all.
- The company will probably send notices to your creditors letting them know they are now working with you. This means the creditors will know that you are now paying a settlement company instead of them. Often, the reaction to this information will be to become more aggressive about collecting what you owe them, possibly by referring your account to a law firm in your area earlier than it would otherwise and giving the firm authorization to sue for the money you owe.
- The settlement company will generally not be negotiating with your original creditors because they mostly wait for your accounts to charge off. Charge-off usually happens at about 6 months of nonpayment. Once creditors charge off bad debt, they will typically do one of three things with your account, assign, sue or sell.
Settlements are still available when your account goes someplace other than with your original creditor after charge-off, but depending on who your creditors are, you’ll save the most through debt settlement by negotiating with the original creditor BEFORE the account charges off. In other words, you could find yourself paying more, sometimes much more, when settling with a 3rd party.
The article in the Detroit Free Press seems to suggest that the CRN member was still hoping debt settlement would work for her by saying “She’s crossing her fingers that this arrangement works.” It did work. She enrolled with CRN in September of 2009 and completed her settlements in March 2010. She got out of debt in 6 months rather than the 3 to 5 years it would have taken her to resolve her debts if she had filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy instead or the average of 4 to 5 years if she had enrolled in a debt management plan.
Credit Reporting
Debt settlement is an option for someone who can no longer continue making timely payments on their debts and whose credit score is, therefore, either already suffering, or soon will be.
What happened to the credit score of the CRN member quoted above?
The CRN member gave me permission to share an excerpt from an email exchange I had with her on 3/22/10:
“…Two days ago, I re-ran my credit and 3 of the 4 settlements had already posted. My credit was already 671-677 from each of the three bureaus! I think my credit ranged from 670-710 in the year prior to starting the settlement process so this is amazing.”
The effect of debt settlement on an individual’s credit score will differ based on several factors, so please do not take the experience of this CRN member as an indicator of what will happen to yours. The points here are: Getting out of debt should be your first priority, and once you do, your credit will bounce back regardless of the option you choose to get out of debt.
The US economic engine is based on roughly 70% consumption. In a tough Michigan economy, this CRN member and her family can return to responsible spending in 6 months rather than 3 to 5 years. Furthermore, not only did she avoid bankruptcy, but also, her creditors got something rather than 90% odds they would have gotten nothing were she to have filed chapter 7 bankruptcy.
If you find yourself running out of money before you run out of month and live in Michigan (or anywhere in the US for that matter), please call CRN a call at 1-800-939-8357 when you are considering debt settlement as one of your 3 legitimate options to deal with debt.
Michael Bovee
CRN President




