One of the most important things that you can come to understand regarding your debt and the concept of debt consolidation is this: You absolutely cannot borrow your way out of debt, in order to solve all of your problems. More than 80 percent of all individuals that managed to bring their current accounts down to a 0 balance did so using a debt consolidation loan, however these individuals ended up owing even more money to the second lender because interest rates ended up hurting them worse than they imagined.
Most consumers are so excited about the prospect of paring down or completely paying off their debts that they gave very little consideration if any to what consequences would exist for the new loan, the debt consolidation loan. Many times these individuals end up owing as much as 50% more to the new lender than they owed for their original debt, which means that this really is not helping the problem in any way.
Unfortunately, this really is not even the worst of it. Countless people are taking debt consolidation loans out as a means of paying off their credit cards. They make the mistake of keeping these credit cards open without doing anything to change their spending habits. Because they do not do anything to fix their spending habits, they end up re-maxing these credit cards out so that they are now tackling credit card debt that is mounting quickly, and the high interest debt consolidation loan that they used to initially pay off the credit cards in the first place.
By the time something like this happens, the consumer has simply come full circle because they are now paying the debt consolidation loan payments and their credit card payments. It really cannot get worse than this, right? You have effectively doubled or tripled your debt in the process of trying to get out of debt, which is completely worthless.
The individuals who do find success with debt consolidation loans are those who have a stable plan in place before they ever actually take the loan out. Not only this, but they are also the individuals capable of following the plan to the letter, never straying no matter what it costs. If you want to succeed with debt consolidation, then you need to understand what it means to take out and pay off a debt consolidation loan. If you do not think that you have what it takes to pay off a loan designated for paying off your other debts, because most of these loans have higher fees and higher interest rates, then by all means find another method of paring down your debt.
Paying off debt is not easy, no matter which way you do it. Debt consolidation loans may be a solution for some, but they are not the answer for everyone because they create more debt rather than getting you out of debt completely. If you have the will power and the income to trade old debt for new debt, and can pay the new debt off before the interest rates get you, then debt consolidation may be the answer. Otherwise, choose a different solution to get you out of debt.
Photo Credit: 1
Related Posts- Roundup - Tis the Season To go shopping, hang out with friends, gather families, share food, bring laughter, and build memories. Happy Holidays! Banking, Credit, and Debt Credit Karma writes How Does Bankruptcy Affect Your Credit? The Sun's Financial Diary posts How to Use Your Credit Card without Going in Debt. The Consumerist with How......
- Untapped Riches: Never Pay Off Your Mortgage--and Other Surprising Secrets for Building Wealth by Susan Cutaia, Anthony Cutaia and Robert Slater On the surface, this book seemed like the ideal read. It has a strong premise of how to create multiple streams of income using debt leverage. That is a great premise and one that we follow and put into practice every day. It was such a disappointment that this book......
- Are Your Finances a Wreck? As the housing crisis worsens and the economy looks increasingly weak, most Americans are facing the reality that their finances are in a bit of a wreck. Chronic overspending, a lack of savings and too much bad debt has left many in a financial condition that they would prefer not......
- The Truth About Dividends When most of us hear the word dividends, we think about the easy life, of lying around on the beach while earning an insane amount of money. The cold hard truth is a lot less pretty. Dividends can pay, but unless you've got a lot of money invested, your returns......
- How to Go Into Debt to Get Out of Debt This really sounds like the ultimate oxymoron, but one of the best ways to get out of debt is to go a little bit further in. What’s that? First, to help this make more sense, let’s clarify – if you need to get out of bad debt, going into good......
- New Loan Funded — Consolidating debt-no late payments — $25,000 at 16% — AA Credit — DTI 41% A new loan funded (Consolidating debt-no late payments – $25,000 at 16%). I participated via my standing orders High Amt (>=15K) Extreme DTI (......
- Loan Rate Analyzer Here is the actual Prosper Loan Analyzer that I use when evaluating a single loan. For input it takes the credit grade, debt to income ratio, and loan amount. It looks at all loans in the last 100 days with the same credit grade, DTI 0% to DTI+10%, and loan......
- New Loan Funded — Consolidating — $25,000 at 23.00% — C Credit — DTI 39% A new loan funded (Consolidating — $25,000 at 23.00%). I participated via my old standing order: High DTI — AF. Which is this loan was funded as a high debt to income ratio and was an auto-funding loan. The borrow had C credit and 39% DTI. As a reminder my......
- Quicken vs Prosper -- ROI Accounting It took a little tinkering, but I finally hit upon the perfect way to integrate Prosper (or LendingClub or ...) with Quicken (or Money or ...) given the current lack of integration between the services (see here if interested.) Since implementing that solution I have had defaulted debt sold. With enough......
- New Loan Funded — really want to get out of debt — $25,000 at 25.00% — C Credit — DTI 131% A new loan funded (really want to get out of debt — $25,000 at 25.00%). I participated via my standing order: Any DTI — AF. Which is this loan was funded as a any debt to income ratio and was an auto-funding loan. The borrow had C credit and 131% DTI. ......
- Card Guards Casino Collectibles
- Card Shuffler Casino Collectibles
- Card Dealer Shoe Casino Collectibles
- Credit, Charge Cards Trading Cards Collectibles
Categories:
Debt, Goal, Money, Personal Finance, bad debt, credit cards, good debt
Tags:


1 comment so far ↓
I believe that if someone actually collected the data, it would show that the vast majority of borrowers end up with a lower net worth as a result of a consolidation loan, because it frees up cash to take on more debt.
Leave a Comment