Debt Management
What is Debt Management?
Debt management is a debt solution that consolidates debt in to one affordable payment without the need for further borrowing.
You make one affordable payment to the debt management company, who distributes it between your creditors. The level of the reduced payments depends upon individual circumstances.
How debt management works
The debt management company (us) takes a financial statement from you detailing your income and all necessary outgoings, included your credit repayments. If this shows contractual repayments exceed your disposable income, the debt management company uses this as evidence to your creditors that you can't afford such payment levels.
This works as under the 1974 consumer credit act, unsecured creditors can't ask you for more than your disposable income once reasonable essential living expenses have been taken into account.
Qualifying for a debt management plan
You will be eligible for a debt management plan / programme if you have at least 3 different creditors, can't afford current contractual repayments, but can afford at a minimum of £100 per month towards your debts.
Why Use Abacus Debt Management
Abacus advises on the full range of debt solutions, not just debt management. Therefore you can be assured that we will only recommend debt management if is the most appropriate solution for you. If your situation is best suited to an IVA, remortgage, debt consolidation loan, debt management plan or even just better budgeting, we will advise accordingly.
Debt Management Case Study
Debt: £42,000, Old Payments: £910, New Payments: £410Client has debts of £42,000 with 8 creditors. He is over 65 years old with £1,270 per month joint income from his own and wife's pension. He was paying out £819 per month.
He own his home, without a mortgage, valued at over £400,000. He was refused secured loan due to insufficient disposable income. We have reduced his payment to £420, with a view to getting a secured loan or downsizing his home in the future.
More Examples »