Information On The Credit Card Debt Elimination Scam
The most common credit card debt elimination scam that you may come across starts with one or more emails that you receive from a debt elimination company. People feel more inclined to believe what they are told particularly when they can no longer handle their debt. Scammers take advantage of their plight and promise to stop their financial agony by making repayment unnecessary without repercussions. Unfortunately that is hardly possible! Don’t trust anything that sounds too good to be true!
A credit card debt elimination scam often has a very legal appearance to convince people of its reliability. All sorts of laws and titles are used to give credibility to the scheme: The Fair Debt Collections Practices, Title 15 United States Code section 1692, the Fair Credit Billing Act and much more. For fees that can climb up to a few thousands dollars, some companies could even send you all sorts of materials to show you that you have the legal right not to pay your debt.
Do not trust the credit card debt elimination scam that hides behind such stories! If you are reasonable you have all the chances of seeing things more clearly! Lenders extend the credit limits for their clients on a regular basis, and billions of people use credit cards. If there was something illegal about this, law makers or law enforcers would have taken measures by now. ‘There is no free lunch’! There is no debt elimination unless you actually pay what you owe; there is no other way!
In order to stay realistic and be wary of a credit card debt elimination scam I suggest the following self-analysis. What did you do with the money? Did you spend it on consume products? Have you paid for home repairs? Well, if you have overextended the credit to consume, who do you think will cover this debt? There’s no way to get all the products for free.
Trusting promises blindly is the shortest way to a credit card debt elimination scam. Send any debt elimination email messages to the spam folder and delete them. Carry on with your payments, and, in case you really need some solutions to reduce your debt, talk to accredited financial institutions and get solid professional advice for one course of action or another. Be cautious, reasonable and moderate, and you’ll keep trouble away!











