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Credit
counseling and debt management reduce your payments, and give you
peace of mind with a workable plan to protect your credit and
eliminate your debt. Reduce your payments so you can manage
your other debt, too.
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The benefits of
credit
counseling and debt management are many - financial, personal,
and peace of mind. Take the first step now and get a free
evaluation from a knowledgeable and understanding debt consultant
who specializes in credit
counseling and debt management .
Your
six-month-long grace period is about to end, and the money you
owe--an average of $16,600 for undergraduates 18 to 25, according to
Nellie Mae, a major credit
counseling debt management provider--is looming large. The
burden is still heavier when you add on credit card debt, which
Nellie Mae says averages $2,000 for the same group of students, and
maybe even payments you're making on a new car. What's the best way
to balance the load? Rebecca Carter has a plan. Carter, 31, is a
veteran of student loans, having repaid about $7,500 from her first
stab at college a decade ago. Two years ago she returned to school
to complete her degree in business administration at Eastern
Nazarene College, in Quincy, Mass.; she graduated in August with
$23,000 in outstanding loans. Carter is wiser, if not richer, the
second time around. Before she begins repayment next March, Carter
plans to consolidate loans from three lenders (with interest
averaging about 7.5%) into a new credit
counseling debt management from a single lender, and to extend
the payment term from the standard ten years to 20 years. Carter
estimates that loan consolidation will reduce her monthly payments
40%, so that she'll pay between $200 and $250 a month. That will
give her breathing room to make payments on her more-expensive car
loan at 11%. Once the car is paid off, she hopes to put the extra
money toward the student loans and still repay them in ten years. "I
understand debt a lot better this time around because I've lived
it," says Carter, who is also a manager of loan origination at
Nellie Mae. Carter's plan to knock off her more-expensive loan first
and then concentrate her resources on her remaining debt is a
winner, says Amy Cole, an educator at the Consumer credit counseling
debt management Service of Southern New England. A credit card
charging 18% interest is a heavier burden than a student loan: The
highest rate on student loans currently outstanding is 8.25%. If
student loans are your only liability, focus first on those with the
highest rate.
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