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Just say NO
to Debt Consolidation
Loans
Bad
credit habits usually doom good intentions
Don't crack your nest egg!
Using home equity
to pay off bills and high interest credit
card debt can look good on paper; that's why
so many folks are doing it. At first glance
consolidation loans look like a good option,
with lower monthly payments, tax-deductible
interest and the ability to replace credit
card debt. But before you go down the loan
path, take a closer look at the details and
risks.
Lower monthly payments
If you're a typical
American consumer, you have too much high-interest
debt, and it's costing a bundle to keep up
with it. You pay late fees, penalties, and
high interest rates. When a lender offers
a chance to lower those monthly payments with
a low-interest, home equity loan or a cash-out
refinancing, it can seem like a great option.
Don't kid yourself; no one's passing out free
lunches. When you tap home equity to pay off
bills, you can lower those high monthly credit
card payments, but you don't get rid off the
debt - you merely shift it.
The lower monthly
payment makes the debt look harmless. But
look closer. Even though the interest rate
is less and the monthly payments are low,
you usually end up paying more over the long
run because the payments are stretched out
over a longer period.
More important, when
people with credit card debt use home equity
to pay off their bills, they usually swear
to God they'll never carry a credit card balance
again; but they forget to change their spending
habits, and they forget to save for emergencies
and big-ticket items. When the car needs a
new transmission, or they need a vacation,
the plastic gets resurrected and the debt
cycle resumes.
Tax-deductible interest
Tax-deductible interest
is the war cry lenders use to prod unwary
homeowners into using their precious home
equity to fund major purchases and pay off
debt. Tax deductions are great, until you
run the numbers. Let's pretend you have $40,000
in 18 percent credit card debt; your current
monthly payment is $1,000. Continue the $1,000
payments, and the debt is history in 62 months.
Total payments will be $62,000 ($1,000 x 62)
and total interest will be $22,000 ($62,000
minus $40,000).
If you were to use
a 7.23 percent home equity loan to stretch
the payments out over 180 months and payments
go down to $365. Total payments will be $65,700
($365 x 180) and total interest, $25,700 ($65,700
minus $40,000); you'll pay $3,700 MORE INTEREST
with the home equity loan. If you're lucky,
the tax deduction will compensate for the
extra $3,700, but don't count on it. The lenders
are the only ones who can bank on making big
bucks on home equity loans; that's why they
spend so much money marketing home equity
loans.
No more credit card debt?
Tapping home equity
makes it easy to get rid of credit card debt,
but that state of bliss is usually only temporary.
It ignores the basic issue of why people rack
up so much credit card debt in the first place.
Most folks who use additional debt to get
rid of credit card debt don't change their
negative spending habits and end up deeper
and deeper in the hole. Some even lose their
house.
Home equity loans can be expensive
Home equity is something
to cherish and preserve, not deplete. Here's
what no one tells you when you sign off on
that home equity loan: Home equity is a time-proven
way to accumulate wealth and provide a sense
of security; when you tap it to pay off bills,
you become poorer. Use home equity as a money
tree and you could end up paying private mortgage
insurance (PMI) forever. Credit card companies
can't foreclose on your home if you run into
financial difficulties. But home equity loans
and cash-out refinancings are debts that are
secured by your home. If you can't make the
payments, you risk living in a cardboard box.
Debt consolidation
loans are expensive and risky and that not
even counting all of those loan origination
fees and prepayment penalties.
Conclusion
For most folks, the
road to getting out of debt and achieving financial
independence is paved with discipline and budgeting,
not more debt. Credit counseling can play an important role in the path. Taking on a different type of
debt clearly does not solve the problem -- instead
it can prolong you debt and can add financial
risks. We strongly recommend that individuals
in debt at least consider other options like
credit counseling and debt negotiation.
Don't
reshuffle your debt with a loan! Instead fill
out the form below FREE no obligation information
on how you can save money and become debt free
WITHOUT A LOAN!
- You
don't have to own your home to consolidate
debt.
- STOP
harassing phone calls from creditors.
- No
credit check needed or required.
- Again,
there is no Obligation.
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