Unsecured Debt Consolidation ? Tips For Getting A No-collateral Loan

Getting an unsecured debt consolidation is not easy, but possible. For the most part, banks and other financial institutions are hesitant to loan money that is not secured by a piece of property. If you were to default on the loan, the lender is unable to recoup their lost. However, some lenders are willing to offer unsecured debt consolidation loans. To obtain such as loan, you must be a prime candidate

Traditional Debt Consolidation Options

Typically, consumers would obtain a debt consolidation using their vehicle or home as collateral. This involved giving the lender possession of a vehicle title or applying for a home equity loan or home equity line of credit. In both instances, if you were unable to repay the loan, the lender could claim your home or car.

Today, many financial institutions are making it possible for consumers to obtain unsecured personal debt consolidation loans. These loans do not require collateral, which could mean a higher interest rate.

Getting Approved for an Unsecured Debt Consolidation Loan

If you are hoping to get approved for an unsecured debt consolidation loan, you must take steps to ensure that banks will consider you a prime applicant. Unsecured debt consolidated loans are not offered to just anyone. Because these loans are not secured, financial institutions are very cautious.

To obtain an unsecured debt consolidation loan, lenders require a very good credit rating. Hence, the key to getting approved for any type of unsecured loan is boosting your credit. To begin, check your personal credit report. Contact several lenders and inquire of their individuals requirements for obtaining an unsecured loan.

In most cases, lenders will require a minimum credit score. If you meet their lending requirements, request a quote. In fact, get quotes from at least three or four lenders. Unsecured loans may carry a higher interest rate. However, some lenders will offer comparative rates for top applicants. These consist of individuals with remarkably high credit scores.

Lenders rarely offer unsecured debt consolidation loans to people with fair or bad credit ratings. The odds of these prospective borrowers defaulting on the loan are much higher. For the most part, persons with a superb credit rating will not risk damaging their credit, which makes them prime candidates for unsecured loans.

Watch the video related to unsecured debt consolidation

www.instantbaddebtconsolidation.com – Can easily be achieved if you know how and what to do .

Help answer the question about unsecured debt consolidation

whats the best website to go to? to get a unsecured loans for debt consolidation. with bad credit and no?
homeownership??? thanks. please give me a answer? thanks

22 Responses to “Unsecured Debt Consolidation ? Tips For Getting A No-collateral Loan”

  • Maftuna says:

    The main type of debt consolidation is the consolidation loan that can either be offset against a form of collateral, ie your home (secured loan) or a standard consolidation loan that you will need a reasonably good credit score to be approved. This is generally called an unsecured loan. An unsecured loan would be the most preferable as you are not risking your home or whatever you have financed the loan against should something unforeseen happen that makes it impossible for you to keep up payments.

  • JEREMY P says:

    Unsecured bad credit debt consolidation loans:

    Persons who do not have anything to offer as the collateral or security, can take unsecured bad credit debt consolidation loans. The lenders find themselves at increasing level of risk while giving such loans. The existing bad credit situation and lack of a collateral, make them charge high interest rates and offer low loan amounts to offset the risk involved. But, a person who has a bad credit and cannot provide a collateral has little choice, but to take these high interest loans. At least by repaying these the borrower can rebuild his credit history.

    Deciding which bad credit debt consolidation loan is right for you can be a daunting task. Many companies offer free debt consolidation help to those who are cash strapped. It is good to take such advice because the professional expertise of such companies can help you decide better. Again, it's you who will have to be very cautious about the interest rates, repayment period, late payment penalties and other fine prints that come with the bad credit debt consolidation loans. Following the repayment schedule can help you write off the bad credit ratings from your credit history. Read more from: http://www.credit-card-gallery.com/article/198,Get_over_bad_credit_problems_with_bad_credit_debt_consolidation_loans

  • Cutie Pie says:

    Please don't use a debt consolidarion agency. Debt consolidation is not free. While it may lower your payments now, you will owe more money and be in debt for a much longer period of time, sometimes years.
    Have a garage sale and sell anything that you no longer use or need. Get a temporary part time job and put all of that pay onto your debt. $8K is not that much and you could knock it all out in less than a year. It is better to have a tough no fun year than a tough no fun decade.Here is a plan that can help you. If you work the plan, the plan will work for you:
    1. Make a budget. Make the budget a week before you get paid. A budget is not a punishment! It is a tool which will free you from ever having to worry about money again. Put everything in your budget. Especially those annual, biannual, or quarterly bills like car registration, insurance, etc. Give every dollar you are going to bring home the name of where it is going. Add an "emergency fund" category to your budget for 25 dollars and save up until you have 1000-1250 dollars. Your emergency fund will help keep you from getting into new debt because of an emergency. If you can, set up a direct transfer to a savings account for your emergency fund. That way it moves automatically and you don't even have to worry about it. You must cut your spending and live on less than you make.

    2.First get current on all of you debts and make no more late payments. Stop using your credit cards immediately. Do not take on any more debt. Credit cards are like quicksand only the death is much slower. Make a list of all of your debts in order of highest interest rate to lowest interest. Use cash only for your spending from now on.

    3.Pay the minimum due on all of your debts and then put your extra money towards paying off the highest interest one first. After you get that one paid off, you put the money you were paying on debt #1 (the minimum payment and the extra payment) towards debt #2. That will pay debt #2 off faster. When that is paid off, you put all three payments towards card #3 and that one will be paid off pretty quickly. As an example:

    To start :
    Debt #1 (highest interest): minimum payment+ extra payment
    Debt #2 (middle interest): minimum payment
    Debt #3(lowest interest): minimum payment

    Debt #1: paid off
    Debt #2: minimum payment from Debt #1+ Minimum payment from Debt #2 +extra payment
    Debt #3: minimum payment

    Debt #1: paid off
    Debt #2: paid off
    Debt #3:Mimimum payment from card #1+ minimum payment from Debt #2+ minimum payment from Debt #3+ extra payment.

    That way, you will get them all paid off, on time, and pay the least interest. It will also help towards rebuilding your credit since you will no longer have any late payments. This works no matter how many different debts you may have.

    4. After you get all of your debts paid off, add to your emergency fund until you have 6-12 months of income saved up. Put that emergency fund money into a liquid money market fund or into a Bank of America no-risk CD so that if you need the money you can take it out without penalty.

    5a. When you have your emergency fund in place, add a category for "fun" to your budget. Save for a holiday, a vacation, a big screen, or dinners out, whatever goal you want. Remember to enjoy your life.

    5b. When you have your emergency fund in place, start saving for your retirement. Join the 401(k) plan at work and contribute the maximum. Your employer probably matches at least part of your contribution so why give up free money? Open a Roth IRA and contribute the maximum on a monthly basis. If you start saving for your retirement now, you will probably retire a millionaire.

    5c. When you have your emergency fund in place, start saving for your next car. Only buy cars, or other things that depreciate, with cash. Save up for a nicer car. That way you get the interest instead of paying the interest.

  • R says:

    Yes…they falloff your record after 7 years of inactivity. However, for those seven years, you have pretty much precluded yourself for obtaining credit elsewhere (or if you can obtain credit, higher interest rates).

  • Geoff K says:

    I had to read that about three times to understand it. So let me get this straight….you are going to use your mortgage brokers that work for you to gather business for a company/individual with debt consolidation experience, let that company do all the work, and your company recieves part of the profits for bringing in the customers, is that right?

  • Jayden says:

    Confused;

    Filing for bankruptcy over $13,000 would be, in my opinion, an unwise move.

    You would be best to figure out how to pay off the debt the cheapest and fastest way possible while doing as little damage to your credit score as possible.

    You mentioned debt consolidation as an option. The term debt consolidation can be a confusing one. Many people think it is a loan to pay off your existing debts. This is not the case. When you hire a debt consolidation company they will in turn try and negotiate lower interest rates with your creditors and act as a buffer between you and those same creditors. You make one "consolidated" payment to this company each month and the make the payments to your creditors on your behalf.

    Another option, (and if you are considering bankruptcy this option may work for you), is debt negotiation. Debt negotiation or debt settlement as it is also known, differs from debt consolidation in that the actual amount of debt that you owe is reduced, not just the interest rate.

    You can find a more in depth discussion of these options along with some recommended resources here… http://www.debt-elimination-guide.com/debt-elimination-options.html

    Best of luck Confused

  • Grillaface says:

    Please do not consolidate. It is not free, they will lower your payments by increasing the length of time until you are debt free, and you will take a hit on your credit score. Or they negotiate your debt down after telling you not to pay for awhile adding another hit to your credit score. Student loans are the only debt that can garnish your wages for non payment without taking you to court first. Just list them out on a piece of paper or a spreadsheet and follow the plan. If you work the plan, the plan will work for you.

    A. Have a garage sale and sell anything that you no longer need or want.

    B.Get a temporary part time job, if you have one, get another.

    Here is a plan that can help you. If you work the plan, the plan will work for you:
    1. Make a budget. Make the budget a week before you get paid. A budget is not a punishment! It is a tool which will free you from ever having to worry about money again. Put everything in your budget. Especially those annual, biannual, or quarterly bills like car registration, insurance, etc. Give every dollar you are going to bring home the name of where it is going. Add an "emergency fund" category to your budget for 25 dollars and save up until you have 1000-1250 dollars. Your emergency fund will help keep you from getting into new debt because of an emergency. If you can, set up a direct transfer to a savings account for your emergency fund. That way it moves automatically and you don't even have to worry about it. You must cut your spending and live on less than you make.

    2.First get current on all of you debts and make no more late payments. Stop using your credit cards immediately. Do not take on any more debt. Credit cards are like quicksand only the death is much slower. Make a list of all of your debts in order of highest interest rate to lowest interest. Use cash only for your spending from now on.

    3.Pay the minimum due on all of your debts and then put your extra money towards paying off the highest interest one first. After you get that one paid off, you put the money you were paying on debt #1 (the minimum payment and the extra payment) towards debt #2. That will pay debt #2 off faster. When that is paid off, you put all three payments towards card #3 and that one will be paid off pretty quickly. As an example:

    To start :
    Debt #1 (highest interest): minimum payment+ extra payment
    Debt #2 (middle interest): minimum payment
    Debt #3(lowest interest): minimum payment

    Debt #1: paid off
    Debt #2: minimum payment from Debt #1+ Minimum payment from Debt #2 +extra payment
    Debt #3: minimum payment

    Debt #1: paid off
    Debt #2: paid off
    Debt #3:Minimum payment from card #1+ minimum payment from Debt #2+ minimum payment from Debt #3+ extra payment.

    That way, you will get them all paid off, on time, and pay the least interest. It will also help towards rebuilding your credit since you will no longer have any late payments. This works no matter how many different debts you may have.

    4. After you get all of your debts paid off, add to your emergency fund until you have 6-12 months of income saved up. Put that emergency fund money into a liquid money market fund or into a Bank of America no-risk CD so that if you need the money you can take it out without penalty.

    5a. When you have your emergency fund in place, add a category for "fun" to your budget. Save for a holiday, a vacation, a big screen, or dinners out, whatever goal you want. Remember to enjoy your life.

    5b. When you have your emergency fund in place, start saving for your retirement. Join the 401(k) plan at work and contribute the maximum. Your employer probably matches at least part of your contribution so why give up free money? Open a Roth IRA and contribute the maximum on a monthly basis. If you start saving for your retirement now, you will probably retire a millionaire.

    5c. When you have your emergency fund in place, start saving for your next car. Only buy cars, or other things that depreciate, with cash. Save up for a nicer car. That way you get the interest instead of paying the interest.

    You can do it and it isn't as hard as you think. Just follow the plan.

  • heyyyyy says:

    do not borrow from peter to pay paul — lower your life style and pay off the debt with out going into more debt!!!

  • Given your options, I would prefer keeping the 401(k) loan. I would pile up as much as possible in a savings account to pay off the 401(k) as soon as I could. If a balance transfer to an ordinary credit card is an option, it sounds better than either of your options to me.

  • personal loan from worldwide banks bad or good credit doesn't matter visit http://www.freewebs.com/getyourloan

  • Tracy J says:

    By using services from a debt relief organization you will stop receiving phone calls asking you for money. You will pay a fixed rate amount every month which will never go up. You won't be dealing with your creditors any more. The "debt relief people" will be paying your bills for you, and your credit card company is out.

  • Jerry d says:

    Bankrupcy should be your last resort. Do not declare bankrupcy if you can help it.

    If you consolidate your loans they will charge you a fee to do so. I would not consolidate if I could help it. You do not want to incure more debt. Follow the following steps.

    First prioritize your bills

    1)Shelter, food, utilities, transportation are your first priority pay these bills first.
    2)Eliminate non essentials –cell phones, cable TV, internet ect.
    3)Negotiate with creditors
    4)Sell stuff to get cash
    5)List bills with total payoffs from least amount to greatest amount and pay the minimum on everything except the first bill where you apply as much as possible until its paid off then move to the next bill.

    Reseach the snowball payoff schedule online

  • KOOLAID says:

    I work in collections for a credit card company, we say just look in the phone book and check with the Better Business Bureau. ALWAYS go with non-profit. The for profit ones will screw you over and most credit card companies will not work with for profit. And remember it can take about 3 months to get this set up with the creditor. Credit counselors have to send proposals to the creditors to be APPROVED. So make sure everything is correct with the creditors and with your credit counselors. And you can still get calls from the creditors until the proposal is accepted. Hope every thing works out for you

  • sfcjtgoff says:

    A consolidation loan is the worst thing you can do. I take it you already have a job, so If I were you, I would get a part time job and use that money to payback your debts. This may take a while but atleast you know that the money is going directly to the company and not in somebody else's pocket.

  • Cpt Doug says:

    Unlikely. Banks are being very careful who they approve for mortgages these days.

  • LAL says:

    This one is not a scam. I've been involved with the following website for nearly a year. Many people have been able to get loans to reduce their credit card debt and have it paid off in 3 years. You can get loans up to $25,000 with only a 1-2% origination fee.

  • Debt consolidation is an option, and you should look into it. Just be careful about WHAT you're getting into. Some plans, because of their higher APR rates get you into more trouble than you were.

    Also, some lenders look poorly upon it later on. Some institutions believe that it really is a black mark. It will depend upon the types of deals that your particular company or lender work out, and of course, your own individual circumstance. For some with absolutely NO way out, debt consolidation is a welcome option.

    Take a good hard look at all the options and plans offered, and don't let a single company pressure you into something you just can't do. Make sure that you're comfortable with the plan offered before you commit to it.

    In any case, it doesn't hurt to investigate debt consolidation as an option. It doesn't cost you anything to find out more information about it.

    If you want a place to start your investigating, there's information and listings for debt consolidation providers on the page listed below. You'll probably find something of use there:

    http://axalda.info/debt-consolidation.html

  • jlynna10 says:

    Bad credit is one of the worst problems to have… however there exists a solution.

    I will hereby talk from my personal experience.

    I did debt consolidation a couple of years ago, however If I had to do it again I would pay to some minor details,
    if someone wants to get out of debt today it is pretty easy with a debt consolidation plan, however it may get a bit tricky at times, I suggest you get as much information as possible online on this first,

    a good place to start in my humble opinion is a straight to the point ebook with question and answer I found :

    http://umgarticles.atspace.com/debt-consolidation.htm

    if it helps kindly remember me in your voting!.. cheers!

  • simonselmira says:

    When consolidating credit card debt, it is important to be aware that shifting unsecured debt (credit cards are unsecured) to secured debt (your mortgage is secured by your home) can create a volatile situation, if there is ever a chance that you cannot afford the new mortgage payment you are now putting yourself at risk of foreclosure.

    If you can get approved for the personal unsecured loan for the amount that you need, definitely go for it. But, make sure you payoff the credit cards and auto loans and be really careful not to rack up any more debt.

    You are wise in staying away from the HELOC. Nobody can predict what's going to happen with this housing market so safeguard your equity for now. Once the market stabilizes you can maybe then go for a home equity loan or a cash out refi and pay back the personal loan.

  • Diva813 says:

    The only one I would recommend would be the NFCC(National Foundation for Credit Counseling. They are non-profit and can probably help you. Most of the other ones work for the creditors and not for you. They can ruin your credit further and charge ridiculous fees.

  • Answerman says:

    None of the above.
    Take control of your own life!

    -Stop spending money you don't have
    -Cut up your credit cards
    -List debts smallest balance to largest, negotiate lower interest rates whenever possible [you may have to surf some balances]
    -Pay minimum on all debts, pay all your budget surplus to the smallest
    -Work up the list of debts until you are DEBT FREE!
    -Do whatever you like with your income for the rest of your life

  • finance says:

    Debt consolidation loans have a number of advantages. Finance companies offer loans with a lower rate of interest, and the loans are spread over a longer period of time. This results in lower expenses and a manageable monthly repayment of the loan. Debt consolidation loans help to repay the debt without much negative impact on the credit rating of an individual. The interest paid on a debt consolidation loan is eligible for tax deductions. More importantly, there is only a single creditor an individual has to deal rather than several creditors.

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