Debt Settlement Agreement

Settling a debt, such as a delinquent credit card account, is a process you can learn and accomplish yourself. Or, you can hire a debt settlement company or lawyer who specializes in consumer law to do the negotiations for you. Even if you decide to hire someone else to negotiate for you, you should know the three steps you take to negotiate debt settlements.

First, we need to define seven terms because some words have precise meanings in this context. Not understanding these terms may harm you later.

Settlement

A magic word for lawyers, original creditors, and collection agents that means, “A final resolution of the claim one party has against another.” A settlement amount can be for less than the balance owed. Note that settlement does not mean a collection agent can sell your account to another collection agent for additional collections. A settlement is final.

Creditors are not required to negotiate a settlement. It is your job to convince a reluctant creditor that a settlement is in their best interest.

Structured Settlement

A structured settlement consists of a pre-determined set of payments over a pre-set time.

Collection Agent

There are two types of collection agents: Those that work on a contract basis to collect a delinquent account; and those that buy accounts from original creditors. Collections agents must comply with the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA).

Original Creditor

The bank that issued the credit card, or medical provider that performed the service. Original creditors may not need to follow FDCPA rules, depending on your state of residence.

Collection Account

The rights to collect on a delinquent debt. It may seem counter-intuitive, but the rights to a delinquent credit card or medical debt are considered an asset. Like any other asset, collection accounts can be bought, sold, or traded. The sale price of a collection account is usually a small fraction of the account’s face value. However, the collection agent has the right to collect the account’s face value.

Terms & Conditions

The details in a settlement such as the amount, when, and who you will make a payment to.

Hard Limit

How much you can afford to pay in your settlement, according to an honest review of your household budget. Make sure you do not overspend on your settlement, especially a structured settlement, because failing to follow-through on a settlement now will make reaching a new settlement for the same debt later much harder.

The three steps to negotiating a debt settlement are:

1. Learn Who Owns Your Collection Account

Go to AnnualCreditReport.com and find the name and contact information of your collection account.

2. Call the Collection Agent or Original Creditor

Collection agents buy credit card collection accounts for 4 to 8 cents on the dollar. Collection agents want to average about 11 cents on the dollar in collections — in other words, double their money. Therefore, start at about 5 cents on the dollar and work up from there in a series of offers and counter-offers.

Negotiation is a process. Don’t start with your final offer. Start low, and explain your situation in personal terms without becoming emotional. Listen to their arguments and answer them clearly. Your job is to convince them to see your side. Their job is to convince you to pay more. If you both play your roles properly, you’ll reach a settlement.

Original creditors are a bit different in several ways. You may need to wait for an original creditor is willing to negotiate a settlement. After you are 30 days or more delinquent on an account, the original creditor will begin collection calls which means, shortly, you will begin receiving marketing “settlement” letters with discounts from the creditor. This gives you notice your original creditor is ready to negotiate. Call the original creditor to begin negotiation with two specific “playing cards”:

You need to explain your hardship, such as bad health, a loss of job or reduction in hours, or pending divorce. Original creditors will give a break to people who can justify their being in a financial hole. They are less likely to negotiate a settlement if you have no explanation for your not paying the debt.

Original creditors want more than collection agents who purchase collection accounts. Start with 40 cents on the dollar or a bit lower. If negotiations reach 60 cents on the dollar, discontinue them and try again in about four weeks.

Time Your Settlement Offer

Collection agents earn bonuses when they achieve monthly goals. The best time to get a deal is often close to the end of the month.

3. Get It In Writing

Once you reach an agreement on the telephone, ask the collection agent or original creditor to put your deal in writing. In law, the settlement is considered a contract that binds both you and the original creditor or collection agent. The other party can either send the agreement on their letterhead to you using the US Postal Service, or fax, or as PDF attachment in e-mail. All three are admissible in court, so someone using US mail, fax, or an attachment to send you a settlement letter are fine. The following terms and conditions should be included in a settlement.