What Happens If I Stop Paying Credit Card Debt?
As an Orlando bankruptcy lawyer, one of the first things I advise my clients to do when they decide they are filing bankruptcy and hire me is to stop paying on their credit cards. Recently, though, before I could offer that advice, a client asked me: “What happens when I stop paying my credit cards?”
The short answer is, the collection process will begin. It usually goes something like this:
1. Non-stop, for about 60-90 days, the original creditor will call. They will call you, your family, your job. All in an attempt to get you to make some type of payment over the phone. They will threaten to ruin your life, at least financially, if you do not pay them.
2. In about 90 days, your original creditor will give up and sell your account to a debt collector. This third party agency will then repeat the actions above.
3. Then, around 180 days from the time you stop making payments, you may hear from an attorney. This attorney will simply try to collect on the debt, following the same protocol in 1 and 2 above.
4. Finally, the attorney may file a lawsuit against you seeking a judgment that would allow the creditor to attempt to collect on the judgment. By the way, then, and only then, can your wages be garnished.
Kind of a long process until a judgment is obtained, right? Over 6 months from the time payments stopped being made if I added correctly. So why, as a bankruptcy lawyer, do I advise my clients to stop paying on credit cards when they hire me?
You see, the objective is for my client’s bankruptcy to be filed well prior to a judgment being entered against them. As long as no judgment is entered, garnishment is not possible. Now, my client can catch up on car or house payments, for those secured debts they intend to keep through filing bankruptcy. They are not wasting that money on payments to malicious debt collectors, for credit card debts that will be discharged in their bankruptcy. They can also use the money they have saved to create that safety net, which I advocate as their Orlando bankruptcy lawyer, to be used as part of an overall, start fresh, strategy when filing for bankruptcy.
And what about those abusive debt collectors? Florida has some of the toughest laws in the country against the type of abuse described above creditors engage in on a daily basis when collecting a credit card debt against my clients. There is also a Federal Law that prohibits those abusive acts by third party debt collectors in the collection of a debt. You can sue your creditors to enforce your rights, and you should.
The debt collection process can be an intimidating experience, or an empowering one. If you know how it works and you know your rights, the empty threats the debt collectors hurl at you in a typical phone call from them will seem laughable, and more often than not, actionable.
Get the Free eCourse to find out how an experienced bankruptcy lawyer to assist you in successfully navigating the debt collection process and help you achieve that fresh start you’ve been craving.
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August 31, 2010
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Posted by K. Hunter Goff
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