Negotiating
with Collection Agencies
Improve Credit Scores and Get A Better Interest Rate
If you’re
in the process of cleaning your credit to get a loan, you may
have an item or two that went to collections. Most of the time
these are medical bills or utility bills after a move, and unpaid
credit cards. The tactic that most credit repair agencies use
is to dispute the item relentlessly (every 30 days) with the credit
bureaus until the item comes off your credit report.
This is not to say that the item will not
pop back up on your credit report if the collector reports it
at a later date. For the purposes of getting a loan to buy a home,
disputing is a temporary fix and may prove useful in improving
your credit scores until you get the financing to purchase your
home.
Many collectors are so persistent that the
item will not budge even after numerous attempts by the credit
repair agency to dispute. If it doesn’t look like its going
to fall off your credit report any time soon, you will want to
pay it off at this time.
NOTE: Negative items typically fall off after
7 years, unless the creditor or collector continues to report
it to the credit bureaus. So choose your battles wisely. Your
credit report will show when a collector reports your account
to the bureaus. If it hasn’t been reported in years, leave
it alone. If it’s repeatedly reported…
It’s time to roll up your sleeves and
negotiate. Call the collection agency and let them know you want
to settle your debt. Tell them that you mean to do the right thing
and take care of your outstanding debts, but only have a limited
amount extra money to work with, and it won’t last long
so you want to pay them now.
They may automatically make a settlement
offer to you. I usually don’t see collectors with the starting
offer at half the payoff balance, but it happens. Before you let
them give you a payoff amount, give them one. Offer half or even
less than half (or whatever you think you can handle) and express
that you have this money to pay them only at this time.
A collector may flat out say “no, I
cant do that” Politely tell them that this is all you have
and you cant afford to give them more, but you would like to take
care of this debt. And hang up. Call them back a few days later
and make the same offer, see if they change their mind.
This is the most important part. If they
agree to your offer, get it in writing. I’ve had collectors
agree to take your payment over the phone and settle your debt,
only to find out that they had only applied the portion you paid
to the full balance and no settlement was agreed to. YOU STILL
OWE THEM MONEY! This was obviously not the agreement you made.
Get the agreement in writing. Ask them to
mail or fax a signed settlement agreement that shows your amount
settling the debt entirely, and bringing your balance to zero,
totally paid off. Let them know that when this is done, you will
wire the money, or overnight a cashier’s check, so they
get their money fast. You must also ask for a receipt of payment,
because this is not the end of your work.
A paid collection STILL stays on your credit
report. Even though it’s paid, it remains as a derogatory
item. This does nothing to increase your credit score. So there’s
one thing left to do. You must get it off the credit report by
asking the bureaus to remove the item.
Its time to dispute again. But now you have
a receipt that shows the item was paid in full. Ask the credit
bureaus to remove the item from your credit report, reason being
that the item was paid. You can dispute by regular mail or fax
and include all agreements received, plus the paid receipt. Then
watch your credit. If the item doesn’t come off, dispute
consistently until it does. Once the item is removed, watch for
your credit score to improve.
Trisha Dingillo is the owner and author of
this website and a licensed Illinois Mortgage Broker. She works
specifically with investors and poor credit buyers.
If you think you cant get a loan because of bad credit,
bankruptcy or foreclosure, please give us a try...
FREE
SPECIAL REPORT
Even though good credit is not necessary to get a loan, you may
want to see what's on you credit report and how to fix it quickly.
I've written a high impact special report called "5 Quick
Tips to Improving Your Bad Credit Now... cut and dry information
you can use right now to improve your credit score" If you
would like my free report, click on the button below.