Like many others probably about a year and a half ago I got letters from my credit card companies telling me that they were slashing my limits and raising my interest rates. The worst was BofA who raised my interest to just under 18%, which made my monthly payment essentially double. Unfortunately, I wasn't in a position to close down the card at the lower interest rate (I wish I had been), since I was basically using it and other cards to live off of. I now owe BofA just over $14k.
About 6 months ago I called them and told them I was having trouble making my payments (they were in the $325/month range). They asked for all of my financial information, and the man I spoke to said it appeared I qualified for a repayment program that would shut off my card, lower the interest rate to around 2%, and after 5 years of about $200 a month it would be paid off. I said okay. He told me to call back in a week just to make sure everything was ok. I did. After many, many calls, I found out they denied me because I needed to make at least $100 more a month (and they wondered why I was having trouble making the $325/month payment!). They suggested I enroll in a third party DMP. I've looked into this before and it basically comes down to not making enough money to pay my mortgage, car, utilities, their negotiated payment, and still have enough money left over to live off of without any credit. I'm not talking about living a luxorious lifestyle, but not being able to afford groceries and gas.
So I struggled and basically robbed Peter to pay Paul, or however the saying goes. Finally I realized I couldn't live like this anymore, so my payment for $350 due January 1st, 2011, didn't get paid. This is the first time in my life that I've ever missed a payment or been late on anything (kind of shocking when you take into account the 32k in debt I have, lol). It's kind of scary feeling, but its also kind of liberating at the same time. With the money I "saved" I bought sneakers and jeans (neither were fancy and both were on xmas sale) for the first time in forever, and have been able to live without charging anything the last month. It feels amazing!
This morning I checked BofA and they've ever so kindly added a late fee to the account. I'm sure in a few days they'll start with the phone calls. I'm not looking forward to this (and neither is my blood pressure), but hopefully now that the account is in default they will be more willing to work with me. I am hopeful that they will allow me into some sort of a repayment plan around the $200/month mark. This will make money really tight, but I'd still be able to get by until I figure out how I'm finally going to get out of this entire mess with all of my creditors. Bankruptcy, perhaps -- but I'd have to wait a while, and this might buy me the time I would need.
If they refuse to work with me then I may have just shot myself in the foot, because quite frankly if I were them, I'd sue me, too, lol.
I'm not interested in a reduced payment for a short period of time; they'd need to agree to a reduced payment/reduced interest rate for the long haul.
Has anyone had any luck with this before with BofA? Them being more reasonable to work out a realistic solution after you default than before?
Thanks,
Mike
About 6 months ago I called them and told them I was having trouble making my payments (they were in the $325/month range). They asked for all of my financial information, and the man I spoke to said it appeared I qualified for a repayment program that would shut off my card, lower the interest rate to around 2%, and after 5 years of about $200 a month it would be paid off. I said okay. He told me to call back in a week just to make sure everything was ok. I did. After many, many calls, I found out they denied me because I needed to make at least $100 more a month (and they wondered why I was having trouble making the $325/month payment!). They suggested I enroll in a third party DMP. I've looked into this before and it basically comes down to not making enough money to pay my mortgage, car, utilities, their negotiated payment, and still have enough money left over to live off of without any credit. I'm not talking about living a luxorious lifestyle, but not being able to afford groceries and gas.
So I struggled and basically robbed Peter to pay Paul, or however the saying goes. Finally I realized I couldn't live like this anymore, so my payment for $350 due January 1st, 2011, didn't get paid. This is the first time in my life that I've ever missed a payment or been late on anything (kind of shocking when you take into account the 32k in debt I have, lol). It's kind of scary feeling, but its also kind of liberating at the same time. With the money I "saved" I bought sneakers and jeans (neither were fancy and both were on xmas sale) for the first time in forever, and have been able to live without charging anything the last month. It feels amazing!
This morning I checked BofA and they've ever so kindly added a late fee to the account. I'm sure in a few days they'll start with the phone calls. I'm not looking forward to this (and neither is my blood pressure), but hopefully now that the account is in default they will be more willing to work with me. I am hopeful that they will allow me into some sort of a repayment plan around the $200/month mark. This will make money really tight, but I'd still be able to get by until I figure out how I'm finally going to get out of this entire mess with all of my creditors. Bankruptcy, perhaps -- but I'd have to wait a while, and this might buy me the time I would need.
If they refuse to work with me then I may have just shot myself in the foot, because quite frankly if I were them, I'd sue me, too, lol.
I'm not interested in a reduced payment for a short period of time; they'd need to agree to a reduced payment/reduced interest rate for the long haul.
Has anyone had any luck with this before with BofA? Them being more reasonable to work out a realistic solution after you default than before?
Thanks,
Mike
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