Good Faith Credit Card Payments Backfire: Debt Experts Weigh In

What happens if you are trying your best to make your credit card payments, but your card issuer wonโ€™t work with you and insists you make higher payments than you can afford? Debt experts weigh in to help this reader understand her options with her credit card payments:

My daughter lost her job a little over a year ago and she was the main bread winner for our family. Since then, she, my grandson and I have been living on my Social Security and part-time job. I was unable to pay anything on my Capital One account for five months. It wasnโ€™t consecutive. I didnโ€™t pay for three months, then I made a couple of payments, then missed two more. I called and explained this to them in November 2010 and told them I thought I would be able to begin paying again in January 2011. The person I talked to at that time didnโ€™t seem to have a problem with this. However, the calls began. Each time I gave the same explanation but no one seemed to have a record of what I previously said. Some of their collectors are good and some very rude, but thatโ€™s another story.

I now have made payments in January, February, March, April, May and soon June. April and May were only $50.00 payments and once again the calls have started. The account has been closed, Iโ€™m trying to pay but it is next to impossible to pay the amounts they want to bring the account to what they are calling โ€œcurrent.โ€  They want $300 for the next three (3) months, they continue to charge $39.00 late fee each month and of course, interest.

I fully intent to pay what I owe them but I canโ€™t seem to meet what they are asking. Do I have any way to get them to quit charging the late fee and agree to a monthly payment that I can meet? Are there still such things as โ€œgood faithโ€ payments?

โ€œLisaโ€

Any time you pay less than the minimum payment due, youโ€™re likely to be charged late fees. And if you fall sixty days behind on your credit card, the issuer can raise the interest rate on your existing balance to a โ€œdefaultโ€ interest rate which can make it that more difficult to dig out from under.

Every creditor handles delinquent accounts differently. Thatโ€™s why I thought it would be helpful to run your question by experts who are โ€œin the trenchesโ€ working with consumers in trouble. So I asked three debt negotiation experts to share their experience with Capital One, as well as their advice for your situation. They all seemed to agree on one thing: your small โ€œgood faithโ€ payments may be backfiring on you, and preventing you from getting into a true hardship plan that would give you the relief you need.

Hereโ€™s what they had to say โ€ฆ

[Article: 5 Steps to Take Control of Your Finances]

From Alex Viecco and Charles Phelan ยป

Image: Steve Johnson, via Flickr.com

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