Debt5A debt management plan is the most usual way for finding a way out of debt. They are not suitable for all people in all circumstances but in this article we will examine some of the pros and cons.

Generally debt management plans are drawn up with the help of debt management experts during a single or a series of face to face meetings. During these meetings the financial circumstances of the client will initially be analysed in detail to determine if indeed a debt management plan is the best option.

Once this has been decided, the person organising the plan, the debt manager,  will contact the client’s creditors and attempt to negotiate a cessation of late payment penalties being charged to the accounts, to negotiate reduced or frozen interest payments, and to negotiate an extended repayment period.

The debt manager will take one monthly payment from the client and distribute it to the client’s creditors until the debts are repaid. The single payment will include an element for the debt manager’s fees.

Some of the major benefits of a debt management plan are:

* Monthly repayments are fixed so there are no uncertainties regarding future payments
* In many cases interest rates are frozen and additional charges are stopped
* It is far simpler to make a single repayment that to pay a collection of individual creditors
* Some of the creditors may be able to stop late fees and lower interest rates.

Some of the downsides of a debt management plan are:

* It is necessary to close all credit card accounts
* They are only appropriate for people who have a regular income and can keep to the repayment schedule
* Once a repayment amount has been agreed, only rarely it is renegotiable
* Credit rating are adversely affected by debt management plans
* A debt management plan is only appropriate for unsecured loans

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