Debt Management
Debt management is a sensible alternative to
consolidation loans or IVAs.
If you're finding it impossible to
refinance your existing debts into a single monthly payment or finding
your credit repayments unmanageable and want to avoid the severity of an
IVA or bankruptcy then debt management might be the answer for you.
This is an arrangement made with your creditors designed to help
you make affordable and sustainable repayments each month. A debt manager
will go through your finances with you and prepare a financial statement
and budget, agree an affordable monthly payment plan with you and
negotiate with your creditors.
Please note that missing payments may cause a breakdown of the agreement and might not be able to be remedied after the event. A debt management plan is where you pay a reduced amount of money forever until the debt is cleared.
Arranging a debt management
plan:
A full assessment of your financial situation is carried
out. To do this, we need to know your regular income and expenditure, who
you owe money to (your creditors) and any other relevant information about
your personal circumstances.
By collating this information into a
financial statement, we are then able to determine how much you can
realistically afford to offer each of your creditors.
Your
creditors will then be approached and asked to accept the reduced
payments. In most cases creditors are happy to agree the plans we initiate
because they know, from experience, that such plans are realistic and
sustainable.
You then make a single monthly payment, all of which
is distributed pro rata to your creditors. Every penny of your monthly
payment goes to reducing your debts.
Throughout the duration of
your plan, you will have an assigned case officer whom you can contact
should you experience any difficulties whilst the arrangement is in place.
Your plan is reviewed at regular intervals to ensure that is still
meets your circumstances.
The plan will continue until your debts
are cleared or until you wish to voluntarily end the arrangement. The most
common reason for this being an improvement in income enabling a client to
leave the plan and revert to their original monthly payments.
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