What Is A Debt Consolidation Loan
Debt consolidation loans are an increasingly popular form of
debt re-payment for those who find themselves unable to pay off
even the minimum payments on credit cards every month.
What is Debt Consolidation?
Everyone knows what debt is; it's the amount of bills that are
left over at the end of every month after you've paid everything
you can. For some of us, that number is a significant one. It
seems that you will never be able to pay it off - especially as
new bills add to it every month.
Debt consolidation is when you take all of these bills and add
them together to create one big bill. This new, big bill is your
consolidated debt. When you consolidate your debt, you will
generally stop adding to the debt total with interest charges
and, most likely, you will be able to negotiate a lower bill
total with each individual creditor. They would rather get, for
example, half of what you owe them than nothing at all. Debt
consolidation benefits everyone involved.
What Is A Debt Consolidation Loan?
A debt consolidation loan is exactly what it sounds like - a
loan that you take out to pay off the total of your consolidated
debt. After you have combined all your debt into one sum total,
negotiated with the creditors to lower that total and knock off
the interest charges, you will come up with one monthly payment
that makes sense. Sometimes, this monthly payment is still too
large a chunk to handle, especially as costs associated with
living continue to pile up everyday. The solution to this
problem is a debt consolidation loan.
With a debt consolidation loan, you can pay off your entire debt
with one big payment then create a smaller, more manageable
payment plan with the company who gave you the loan. This loan
payment will have interest charges built in and will most likely
take much longer to pay off than if you simply paid off your
consolidated debt. The benefit is that your monthly payment will
be something that you will actually be able to pay rather than
one more bill that will end up in the 'unpaid' pile each month.
Check out your options thoroughly before choosing a debt
consolidation loan provider. Make sure you get the best rate
possible. Just like a credit card, it's important to check out
the fine print before you sign up for any debt consolidation
loan.