Persons in debt can benefit greatly with a debt relief program designed specifically for their individual circumstances. There really is no such thing as the one plan that can help each person because condition and circumstance can vary greatly. Finding a debt relief program specifically for your needs is important so you can get out of debt in a timely manner.
In order to avoid face-to-face meetings, whether because of time constraints or the feeling of being embarrassed, many people seek a debt relief program on the internet. While there are many ethical companies operating online, there are a few things to remember when you are considering a program online. First, there is no identification requirement to establish a website or to obtain a domain name. Therefore, anyone with a computer can buy a name and set up a website offering a debt relief program.
Most online advertisers do not require identification for advertisements placed other than the billing information. Unless charges on a credit or debit card are disputed, no one checks the background of internet sites offering a debt relief program and many sites offer no insight as to who is in charge.
Common debt relief scams
Many companies offer debt relief scams looking to take advantage of someone else's misery to make money. Promising to reduce personal debt while keeping creditors at bay, they carry out their debt relief scams on those who can least afford to lose their money.
Some debt relief scams are outright deceptive, who take money from unsuspecting people and never pay a dime to creditors so that the person is out of money and the creditors are still looking for payments. They will usually set up a fake storefront or internet portal that vanishes almost as fast as it was started. Names change almost every week and the ones who responsible for these scams do their best to remain anonymous.
Normally, debt relief scams will accept payments only in the form of cash or money order and usually refuse debit or credit cards due their tracking capabilities. They push to get the money in cash by saying that with the business they are in dealing in currency allows them to reduce costs as well as keep their service fees as minimum as possible.
With some debt relief scams they will actually contact creditors and inform them they are working on your behalf and negotiate lower payments. You will also have the benefit of making one payment to them and in turn they will send payments to your creditors. However, their service fees can be ridiculously high and sometimes even as high as 50 percent of your monthly payment.
While your debt is being reduced, the debt relief scam company is getting rich by charging you as much as all of the combined creditors are receiving. For example, if you have 10 creditors and are paying the scam company $200 per month, the company is keeping $100 for itself while your creditors are receiving $10 each per month. Therefore, depending on the total debt amount, it can take a long time to pay off the bills.
Another of the big debt relief scams involves offering to sell you information about where to go for government grants to get debt relief. When you are visiting sites of the US government or state governments, it soon becomes apparent that there is no such thing as a free lunch from the government. There are no such things as free government grants to help with your personal debt. The company is selling you a CD and a monthly subscription for you to use the information on the CD to apply for grants that you most likely will not qualify to receive.
Understand who you are dealing with
Many online companies use a PO Box for mailing purposes to help maintain their personal privacy, but legal companies will not have any problem in supplying a physical address to their potential customers. Therefore, those companies offering a debt relief program that refuse to give anything other than a PO Box may not be completely honest. There should also be contact information readily available on the site, together with a name, email address, and phone number.
With that information unavailable, you cannot tell who you are doing business with and entering into a debt relief program on blind faith because of what is presented on a web site is definitely not the smartest move. When you think about it, they are asking you to send money to an unknown person at an unknown location on the promise to provide services. Being unwilling to supply specific information should make you question whether the company can or will provide the service they promise.