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Which Debts To Pay First

If you're having serious financial problems, you're probably are having trouble keeping current on all of your debts. And you can only cut expenses so much, and your income cannot be stretched to cover all of your obligations. This leaves you with no choice but to delay or eliminate payment on certain debts. One of the most important choices you will have to make is which debts to pay first.

Your main strategy in dealing with too much debt is deciding which debts to pay first, which you can refuse to pay, and which you can put off until later. The most important creditor to pay is not necessarily the creditor that screams the loudest or the most often. Creditors who yell the loudest often do so only because they have no better way to get their money.

Creditors that can take quick action against your residence, utility service, car, or other important assets are priority. You should also direct your limited resources to what is most necessary for your family. This typically includes food and other important necessities. Unfortunately, there is no universally applicable list of the order in which debts should be paid. Everyone's situation may be different.

Following the rules below may make the difference between keeping or losing possessions. Instead of delaying or eliminating certain debt repayments, you may be tempted to take out more debt to repay old debts. This is a bad idea.

Sixteen rules about how to set priorities

Pay off creditors who can take the quickest action to hurt you, not those who are calling you the most often, especially credit card debt collectors. Pay your mortgage or rent first; worry about other unsecured bills later.

  1. Always Pay Family Necessities First. This usually means food and essential medical expenses.
  2. Next Pay Your Housing-Related Bills. Keep up your mortgage or rent payments if at all possible. If you own your home, real estate taxes and insurance must also be paid unless they are included in the monthly mortgage payment. Similarly, any condo fees or mobile home lot payments should be considered a high priority. Failure to pay these debts can lead to loss of your home. If you are having very serious irresolvable financial problems which will require you to move to a cheaper residence, you might choose to stop paying the mortgage or rent on your existing residence. When you do so, you should not use that money to pay other debts, but rather save it as a fund to use for moving.
  3. Pay What You Must to Keep Essential Utility Service. While this may not always require full payment (such as during winter moratorium on disconnections), whatever payments are necessary should be made if at all possible. Working hard to keep your house or apartment makes little sense if it is not livable because you have no utilities.
  4. Pay Car Loans If You Really Need Your Car. If you need your car to get to work or for other essential transportation, you will usually make your car loan or lease payments next after food, housing costs, new medical expenses, utilities, and clothing. You may even want to pay your car loan first if the car is essential to holding onto your job. If you do keep the car, stay current on your insurance payments as well. Otherwise the creditor may buy at your expense even more costly collision and theft insurance that gives you much less protection. In most states it is also illegal not to have automobile liability coverage. If you can do without your car or one of your cars, you not only save on car payments, but also on gasoline, repairs, insurance, and the like.
  5. You Must Pay Child Support Debts. These debts will not go away and can result in very serious remedies - including prison for nonpayment.
  6. Income Tax Debts Are Also High Priority. You must pay any income taxes you owe that are not automatically deducted from your wages, and you must file your federal income tax return even in you cannot afford to pay any balance due. The government has many collection rights, particularly if you do not file your tax return, that are not available to other creditors. Remember, if you have lost income due to a change of circumstances, your tax obligations will also be reduced. Pay only what is necessary.
  7. Loans Without Collateral Are Low Priority. Most credit card debts, signature loans, personal lagoons, doctor and hospital bills, and other debts to professionals, open accounts with merchants, and similar debts are low priority. If you have not pledged any collateral for these loans, and there is rarely anything that these creditors can do to hurt you in the short term. Many won't bother to try to collect in the long term.
  8. Loans With Only Household Goods Collateral Are Also Low Priority. Sometimes a creditor requires you to put some of your household goods up as collateral on a loan. You should generally treat this loan the same as an unsecured debt, that is as a low priority. Creditors rarely seize household because they have little market value, it is hard to seize them without court process, and it is time consuming and expensive to use a court process to seize them.
  9. Do Not Move a Debt Up in Priority Because the Creditor Threatens Suit. Many threats to sue are not carried out. On the other hand, nonpayment of rent, mortgage and car debts may result in loss of your home or car.
  10. Do Not Pay When You Have Good Legal Defenses to Repayment. Some examples of legal defenses are that goods purchased were defective, or that the creditor is asking for more money than it is entitled to. If you have a legal defense, you should obtain legal advice to determine whether your defense will succeed. In evaluating these options, remember that it is especially dangerous to withhold mortgage or rent payments without legal advice. However, for all debts you should consider fighting back when you have a valid defense.
  11. Court Judgments Against You Move Debt Up in Priority, But Often Less Than You Think. After a collector obtains a court judgment, that debt often should move up in priority, because the creditor can enforce that judgment by asking the court to garnish wages, and levy bank accounts. Nevertheless, how serious a threat this really is will depend on your state's law and your income. It may be that all your property and wages are protected under state law. Then you should pay this debt only after more pressing obligations.
  12. Student Loans Are Medium Priority Debts. They should generally be paid ahead of low priority debts, but after top priority debts. Most student loans are backed by the United States and federal law provides special collection remedies against you, such as seizure of your tax refunds and denying you new student loans and grants that are not available for other types of loans.
  13. Debt Collection Efforts Should Never Move Up a Debt's Priority. Be polite to the collector, but make your own choices about which debts to pay based on what is best for your family. Debt collectors are unlikely to give you good advice. Debt collectors may be most aggressive to get you to pay debts which you should actually pay last. You can easily stop debt collection contacts and you have legal remedies to deal with collection harassment.
  14. Threats to Ruin Your Credit Record Should Never Move Up a Debt's Priority. In many cases, when a collector threatens to report your delinquency to a credit bureau, the creditor has already provided the credit bureau with the exact status of the delinquency. And, if the creditor has not done so, a collector hired by the creditor is very unlikely to do so. In fact, your mortgage lender, your car creditor, and other big creditors are much more likely to report your delinquency (without any threat) than is a debt collector that threatens you about your credit record.
  15. Cosigned Debts Should Be Treated Like Your Other Debts. If you have put up your home or car as collateral on a loan you have cosigned, that is a high priority debt for you if the other cosigners are not keeping the debt current. If you have not put up such collateral, treat cosigned debts as a lower priority. If others have cosigned for you and you are unable to pay the debt, you should tell your cosigner about your financial problems so that he or she can decide what to do about that debt.
  16. Refinancing Is Rarely the Answer. You should always be careful about refinancing or taking out a debt consolidation loan. It can be very expensive and it can give creditors more opportunities to seize your important assets. A short term fix can lead to long term problems. Keep in mind, there is no such thing as borrowing yourself out of debt.
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