August 30, 2008

Debt Consolidation Loan: The Truth About Debt Consolidation

A debt consolidation loan will rarely reduce the amount of money you owe. There will be new loans costs added to your balance. Your interest will also go up because you will be taking much longer to pay off the new loan. Consolidation borrowing almost always adds to your debt. In other words, you can’t borrow your way out of debt. In other words, you can’t borrow your way out of debt.


Let’s imagine your current bills total $10,000 and it will take five years to pay off a consolidation loan as a payment of $250 per month. With this loan structure, your new debt, with interest, equals $15,900.

The act of debt consolidation usually results in a somewhat lower monthly payment, but this payment must be made for a much longer period of time. For example, you could also consolidate that same $10,000 debt so that your payments would drop to half the $250 that we previously said. This would make your new payment only $132.50 per month.

Sounds great, doesn’t it?  Think about it, though. The term of the lower monthly payment will now be 12 years instead of five years. So, your true total debt will go up over $19,000.

Consolidation by a bank or finance company usually will not reduce your total cost in terms of time served to pay off your debt. These institutions almost always charge a higher interest rate because your risk of default or bankruptcy has increased since you made the original loans.

Debt consolidation is just another way of enslaving you in further debt. The lender is the one who benefits, not the borrower. Debt consolidation is done for three basic reasons:

1. It discourages bankruptcies
2. It gives the lender a chance to adjust the interest rate upward.
3. The lender has the opportunity to add collateral to the loan.

The only exception to debt consolidation is if you can get the interest on your total bill reduced. The debt would be paid off quicker because more of each payment will be going toward the principal and paying off the balance of your loan.

Again, you cannot borrow your way out of debt; you can only borrow your way deeper into debt.

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Filed under Debt Consolidation by dawg

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