Love to be the one to Make your money go further?

Then register for free and get exclusive, personalised benefits that will help you achieve all your money goals.

Join the lovemoney.com experience

Register Now

Confused?

Why Register?

The secret way banks keep tabs on you

Published 20 March 2010 in Make your money go further

Banks have a secret, sneaky way to keep track of what you're doing - and if you're not careful, you could find yourself in serious financial trouble.

What do you know about 'Risk Triggers'?

Nothing? Well, it knows a lot about you.

Risk Triggers is "daily monitoring service" from Experian that allows banks, credit card companies and lenders to find out "derogatory information such as bankruptcies, judgments, liens and late payments" within 24 hours of it being noted on your "file".

In other words, the moment you misbehave - even if you miss just one payment - all the other financial institutions you are involved with, from your credit card provider to your mortgage lender, can receive an alert informing them of your misdemeanour. And there's no way you can stop them or opt out - when you sign up to get the credit in the first place, you have to give them the right to check up on you in this way at any time.

And what will the banks do with this information they are sharing about you behind your back? Again according to the website, Risk Triggers enables "credit-grantors" to "manage potential delinquencies in the earliest stages".

What does that actually mean for you and me?

Down the slippery slope

Imagine this scenario. You go away on holiday, move house, the post goes missing - or perhaps you simply forget. But for whatever reason, you fail to pay one of your credit card bills for one or two months.

The next thing you know, you receive a letter from one of your credit card providers. The letter informs you that the credit limit on your card has been cut, instantly, and you are no longer allowed to spend as much as you had once been able to.

There's no explanation.

The next day, you receive a letter from your bank. Your overdraft limit has been reduced.

Again, there's no explanation.

It's terrible timing. You are committed to make a large purchase that month, and suddenly your finances are in disarray. So again, you miss a credit card payment and perhaps you are, for the first time ever, late with your mortgage payment.

Instantly, another letter arrives in the post, this time from the mortgage lender. It warns you that failure to meet your mortgage payments could lead to your home being repossessed, and implies you are in serious financial trouble.

It is one of the scariest letters you have ever opened.

A nightmare come true

Are the hairs on your neck starting to stand up? If not, they should be - because this nightmarish situation is becoming a reality for many. Just last week, The Guardian reported that credit card providers are suddenly slashing their credit limits for borrowers with excellent credit histories, basing their decision on information they have discovered about the borrower through their credit report.

But while I think it is appalling that banks can share information about you without your knowledge or explicit permission, and there is no way of stopping them (except, of course, by living a credit-free existence), I wonder whether - for some people, at least - the Experian service is actually proving to be a blessing in disguise?

On this week’s Soapbox, Ed Bowsher examines and reviews debt solutions

Risk Triggers will, for example, pick up on the fact that a customer has started applying for lots of credit suddenly, perhaps in order to pay their mortgage. Shifting debt around in this way often only delays the inevitable - repossession --while racking up thousands of pounds in extra interest charges on the credit card.

Experian argues that reducing the amount of credit available to someone who is in real financial trouble (and therefore basically living on borrowed time as well as borrowed money) could force that person to seek help and address his or her debt problems sooner rather than later. This could potentially save that person a lot of money, and may even prevent him or her from going bankrupt.

To some extent, I can see the point of this argument. And if I could be certain banks were only going to take action when a real problem emerges (for example, if someone misses several payments in a row or on several different credit cards at once), then I would be able to rest easier in my bed. But the fact that they could, in theory, decide to take action after you miss just one payment on just one card - without bothering to find out why this happened -- that worries me a lot.

What do you think? Have you ever be turned down for credit for no reason or had your credit limit suddenly slashed? Let us know using the comments box below.

Finally, don't forget you can beat the banks at their own game by downloading your own credit report to find out what information the banks are keeping about you. You can get access to your credit report for free for 30 days via lovemoney.com - just make sure you remember to cancel before the 30 days are up.

This article has been edited and updated from an earlier version published in 2007.

Compare credit cards at lovemoney.com

More: Get A Free Credit Report

Enjoyed this? Show it some love

Share this lovemoney.com content on any of the social networks and utilities below by simply clicking the site of your choice.

  • You can subscribe to all lovemoney.com articles via our RSS feed.

Comments

jb625 said

  • 2 recommendations

It is rediculous that the bank should be keeping such a close tab on people.  It might be justified when dealing with some but for others it is not.  I have an existing acount with Littlewoods finance (credit card) and I had spent a small amount on this card - I have now stop using the card because the interest rate is very high.  Howerer, each month I try to pay more than the minimum payment but every so often Littlewoods would write to me informing me that my credit limit has been cut. 

I now got to the point where I no longer care and now just cannot wait to pay the whole lot off.  I will never take out an account with Littlewoods again and will make sure that I cut up the card when this is all over.

  • 1 recommendation

This article is not balanced imho.

It is a fact that banks get no warning of most insolvency situations. An account goes from normal behaviour to a total bad debt on the openining of an insolvency order. Folks are encouraged to divert their salary away from their bank, stop paying loans, and have usually maxed out credit cards as well, before walking away from their debt.

Failing to make a regular credit card payment then, will cause alarm, and failure also to set up a direct debit either for the whole balance, or for the minimum, puts the blame firmly on the customer.

Having post go missing cause a problem of not paying a bill, simply means that they cannot be bothered to track what is due when. If a mortgage payment is going to be missed, then for goodness sake tell the mortgage company before it happens. It is the lack of contact that causes the concern.

Making minimum payments regularly means that the borrower is overextended and a poor credit risk - no one managing their finances properly should pay credit card rates for more than an occasional period.

Many banks are going much further than the article suggests, in that it is now routine to monitor activity to discover stress indications.

Paying the mortgage with a credit card, minimum payments, use of payday loan companies., all these are stress indicators and mean that the banks would rather not have your business thank you very much.

As regards the poster anxious to cut up the Littlewoods card and tries to pay more than the minimum payment, both Littlewoods and JB625 will be in an improved position once this occurs.

lindleytvr said

  • 1 recommendation

I agree that this trigger could be seen as a good thing, but that is as long as it isn't abused by the banks and errors do not put customers at risk.  But banks and other institutions make mistakes and it is always the customer who's left struggling when they do.

For example we have a small overdraft set up on our current account from when we started our business 2 years ago.  Every month without fail we reduce this overdraft by as much as we can afford.  However an administrative error resulted in the overdraft being moved from authorised to unauthorised and subsequently a couple of direct debits were returned unpaid (fortunately for minor items).  It was entirely the bank's mistake and they rectified the matter immediately, but what if those returned direct debits were a credit card, mortgage or loan payment?  It would show as unpaid or a late payment. 

And what if an item goes unpaid because of another direct debit being taken in error? 2 years ago our car insurance accidentally took an annual payment rather than monthly - we only found out when another direct debit failed. 

The system is only as good as the information within it, and whilst there are many who abuse the system, innocent people are often the hidden victims.

riskychris said

  • 0 recommendations

Just to stop people getting too anxious, when you miss a payment on your credit card it is not reported to the credit bureau until the start of next cycle so you will have received the next bill before the credit bureau is told. The lost in the post or holiday scenarios really don't stack up.

Also, most lenders will actually put you into a "watch bucket" if you miss one

payment with another lender. They are unlikely to react as decisively

as your scenarios suggest.

All lenders take this data once a month from the credit bureau. They will then score you and decide what to do with your account. All this new tool does is allow them to do this on a daily basis (if their systems are able to).

In America this tool is used far more aggressively. One lender used to monitor people who were not actually customers and if they applied for a mortgage with another lender, they would send out a pre-approved mortgage offer immediately. Imagine, you apply to one lender and get an offer in the post from another two days later! Fortunately that's illegal over here.

Mike10613 said

  • 0 recommendations

I missed two payments with my credit card company, the first was a postal problem and they refunded the charge for late payment. the second they sent the bill two months late and then made a fuss sending me a huge pile of papers that was a statement going back to when I first had the card. my credit limit was £1,000 and i had £5,000 in my savings account with them; hardly a bad risk. My other bank where i have my current account phone me up asking if I want a credit card because I'm never overdrawn and always have a healthy balance; they are not sharing information. My savings aren't with either banks now, they both pay rubbish interest rates. I'll stick with my credit card but make sure I pay it off whether those dopey idiots manage to send the bill or not. I just keep it for online purchases over £100 now. Bankers are now like politicians  and bureacrats, a waste of space. 

oldhenry said

  • 1 recommendation

You say that banks pay such attention to potential defaulters, yet many bought secondary mortages in bulk from the USA!. These were all potenrial defaulter, and many actual ones too. Incredible, who on earth runs these banks?, morons ,I suppose has to be the answer.

I have no faith in the British Banking system at all, but what else do we have, with a compliant Governemnt ready to do anything to assist them rob our pockets, just like the government do .

Grizelda1 said

  • 2 recommendations

Personally, I think ALL Credit Reference Agencies should be outlawed and got rid of, especially EXPERIAN which is based in Nottingham.  I have asked them on several occasions to REMOVE false and inaccurate material on my Credit File and keep getting fobbed off to the point where it looks like I'll now have to lock horns with the Information Commissioner to FORCE them to remove this stuff!!!! Incidentally, jb625 some of the false and inaccurate information I'm talking about also relates to a LITTLEWOODS account!!!!  These Credit Reference websites, like Credit Expert are a total RIP OFF, no wonder Experian can afford to pay for TV advertising with the £7 a month they charge mugs like us to 'check' their Credit reports!!!!!! £7 a month for information you are actually entitled to see "FOR NOTHING" under the Data Protection Act!!!! What a bunch of con artists eh????  Also, every Credit Reference Agency gives you a different score, so you can have a Great score with one and a lousy score with another!  This practice should either be OUTLAWED COMPLETELY or streamlined and brought into line.  Don't know about the FSA getting the banks to Clean Up Their Act, it's about time they REGULATED Credit Reference Agencies and made them toe the line!!!!!

  • 0 recommendations

lindleytvr: If the Bank makes an error as you have suggested, it may very well affect your Credit File, however, as riskychris has noted "it is not reported to the credit bureau until the start of [the] next cycle so you will have received the next bill before the credit bureau is told."

Therefore you have time to rectify the mortgage or card bill payment, but - and this is the benefit to customers - should a Bank make the error, it is obliged to correct it.

So aside from making the correcting payment in line with the agreement, it has to 'repair' your Credit File, at its own expense.

Then you should obtain a fresh Credit Report (again, the cost is due to the Bank and not you), some six to eight weeks later so that the information can filter through.

Similarly, you have the opportunity to apply a Notice of Correction to the Credit File, so that you can explain to anyone permitted to review your file, what the sequence of events behind the error were.

This is not a one-sided matter - although the bias in this article is more towards a problematic individual - and the Bank's have to play by the rules too, if they make a mistake.

You have to be put back into a position where you were before the error.

However, I appreciate that Donna is playing Devils Advocate here, so readers should not be unduly worried, unless they are in financial difficulties and if that is the case, get FREE independent advice from either Citizens Advice Bureau (CAB) or Consumer Credit Counselling Services (CCCS).

By the way Mike10613, I respect many of your comments to articles and have found them positive to read, but as a banker, I don't consider that I'm 'a waste of space'.

Perhaps you could target those bankers that you feel are a waste of space, but is the Cashier that serves you, or the Enquiries Clerk that sorts out a query for you - still keeping a smile on their faces in these tough times in banking - are they a waste of space?

Without them in that 'space', who'll help you?

The old addage, money makes the world go around is as true today as it has ever been, but to do this, you have to have bankers - like it or not.

But some, are those you read about in the pink pages and others are those with a family, house, mortgage, bills to pay etc...please don't begrudge them a job/income.

There, done it again! I'm off my soapbox (once more) now and I'm no doubt due a tirade? C'mon then....

Rayoz said

  • 0 recommendations

I have had personal and business accounts with all of the big UK banks, over the years and unfortunately still have. I think banks are as trustworthy as politicians. They will tell you anything and promise you all the help you need provided you keep them informed. Wrong as sson as you have a problem even a small one they will be the first one to stick a boot into you. I know this from experience. One of my businesses hit a cashflow problem, I spoke to the bank; got an overdraft [at a price!]; the cash started flowing slower than promised [promised to me that is] so the bank insisted on immediate repayment of the overdraft and unlifted the rate from 7% to 19% with immediate effect. The company went to the wall thanks to the banks "helpfulness". I learned from that episode that it is best to tell them nothing, have only one account with any one bank ie. personal account Lloyds, Mortgage Barclays, Savings Nat West, Other savings HSBC it then puts you more in control because they don't know everything about your financial position. If a problem starts to develop you at least have a bit of time to try and sort it out. If everything is in one bank they will pull the plug on you and let you drown.

The banks don't like to take any risks, but business, and in many ways life, is one big risk, and to increase your personal wealth you have to take calculated risks, but the banks are not interested, they are more concerned about selling you house and car insurance.

DON'T TRUST ANY OF THEM. 

charles125 said

  • 0 recommendations

One particular risk is if you haven't used a card for 12 months and then do so and find after a couple of 'missed' payments that the direct debit you set up originally is no longer valid. More of a problem if you don't open the CC mail for a couple of months or more......!

Basically if a direct debit is not invoked for 12 months, your bank mothballs it!

Make a couple of payments manually and get the card company to reset up the direct debit!

Do be aware of this one, as it could hurt your credit score very painfully!

Tulip2 said

  • 0 recommendations

Hi, I'm wondering if my ex-husband's personal bad credit cards record is still attached to the marital home address which I'm still residing, as I no longer receive the annoying junk mail offering me dozens of credit cards.  I will not have one as I do not believe in getting into debt.  He has breached the maintenance order as he is in more debt and says if I pressure him he will send his creditors to me now for his 'Charge back' on the marital home.  This does not take effect until 2012.  The mortgage is in my name and is up to date.

Also, on credit facilities on mail order goods I objected to a charge of £1 payment protection charge on a balance of zero.  When I demanded a refund on principle they replied that they always did this.  Cheek! I'll be shopping elsewhere............

PennyJS said

  • 0 recommendations

It is not just the Credit Cards. I have my mobile phone contract with 3. When I re-contracted in December I was offered and extra SIM card for £10 a month with a good deal on texts and minutes. Thinking my Grandson might benefit I asked if I could cancel if not needed. On thinking about it I decided that Grandma might end up with a problem so phoned and cancelled. I was assured that all had been cancelled only to find 2 months later that I was being charged for the card and the bill had been passed on to the Debt Collection Dept. It took me ages to get it sorted out including 3 saying that the Debt Dept phone number 08453550397 was not one of their numbers. I could write a book on it!!!!

All is supposed to be sorted out but I will believe it when I get the final closing account bill.

Onegin said

  • 0 recommendations

The main purpose of this article seems to be to generate commission for lovemoney by encouraging people to sign up to Experian (whose quality is amply described in the comments already made). But then, that's the case with lots of other lovemoney articles so what's new?

RHWalpole said

  • 0 recommendations

I no doubt had a risk trigger recently when my wife's BHS credit card bill for December was not delivered until the third week in February by which time she had received several phone calls demanding to know why she had not paid the bill.  She pointed out that no bill had been delivered - this was received in such a way that they obviously believed she was a liar.  Of course we had to pay a fee and interest.  OK.  Perhaps we should have been aware of the situation, but I pay all the bills and as this bill related to Christmas presents for me she had not given me the bills.  When I complained to the Post Office it was, of course, not their fault as the post had started off with TNT.  I did not bother chasing TNT.

We have several credit cards and they are always paid in full on time, but obviously we can be black marked when something outside our control happens.  Do I care - not really.

Harajus said

  • 0 recommendations

Look guys, everybody out there is out to make as much money as they can think of. Some suffer from greed too. You trust ones you don't know well personally at your own peril. If you still trust banks and building societies and anything in the financial system you deserve all you get.

The Banker tells you to care for the front line staff because they're human. It's top brass who make ruthless decisions nowadays. The bank manager has to get permission over the phone for everything. So he's as worthless as the bank clerk, The Big Brother stuff comes from far above. If you want to regain control of your life (and I don't just mean finance) set yourself a target to live by C-A-S-H. Yes it takes determination, time and planning but is far easier than giving up smoking or losing weight. It's achievable. Think of it as installing a water meter. You stop wasting any water. Similarly you'll clear your mortgage sooner. You'll even realise that Nectar Cards and credit cards cashbacks are all part of Big Brother and you'll stop using them too. Don't worry you won't grind the system to a halt. There'll always be other mugs out there to keep it going. When you get your first extra discount for paying in cash you won't look back!

It's good there's a financial system. You just don't have to be part of ALL of it to survive.

Good luck

brassic said

  • 0 recommendations

I've had mixed experience with banks. This has varied from considerate service, to practices which would be questionable in an itinerant used car salesman.

I have observed banks pull the plug on viable businesses and have experience of one high st. name knowingly support a company which was trading fraudulently until they had their own money safe and then quietly letting all other creditors suffer.

I appreciate that banks have a code of conduct, as do our elected leaders. Need I say more?

busyhels said

  • 0 recommendations

id like to know why many banks dont offer structural help to its customers if they see they are having or posibly heading for difficulties. with a polite helpful letter perhaps?

most of us dont want to owe money and get in these problems , some of them are out of our control. the more we help ourselves the worse off we are. as was said earlier some risks have to be taken it not always easy to give up trying when trying to persue your dreams. 

being less forceful and more approachable and sympathetic to all customers needs and problems would go a very long way to gain trust and help find solutions. after all, we in difficulties pay a lot of wages and bonuses through our misfortune of paying charges and interest.

you carry on like this you wont have any customers left then where will you get your bonus from?

  • 0 recommendations

Credit reference agencies are somewhat like job agencies, no one wants them, but they are a necessary evil.

This country appears to love bureaucratic nonsense, and CRA's are certainly that. The FSA needs to be called in to sort these people out.

There are horror stories with any CRA making foul ups, but that is par for the course, when you have a convoluted system of bureaucracy that necessitates shifting of data from many sources. All it needs is one clerical error and the whole system goes into a tail spin. I have applied for credit before and been turned down, for what reason I have no idea, but feel it has something to do with these agencies and incorrect data. I have a credit card and never miss a payment, my bank balance is always positive and all my bills are paid regularly. Go figure.

In answer to a ladies question above, credit is not linked to a spouse, unless it is a joint account, It is not allowed by law, and if the agency holds incorrect information, they have to change it or remove it entirely. You can even add a statement if you wish.

If a credit reference agency refuses or neglects to remove false information, they can be sued, so if you have this type of problem, the easiest way is to take legal action, making sure that all costs are charged to them.

Although these companies think they have the upper hand, the law works in your favour when you are in the right, something these companies are so ready to dish out, but actually bank on the complacency of the average not to take reciprocal action in the same form.

ticktock said

  • 0 recommendations

Question; Why do you need to contact/check a crediit reference agency? Keep a full and upto date record of your accounts, both debit & credit. Go to your bank at least every 2 weeks and check your account/s. Phone your credit card company/s the same, check they have received your payment and what your balance is. It's your money, it's your life. Manage it.

People should always read the small print on credit agreements and bank accounts, including overdrafts. Any words you don't like or understand, ask and re-ask again until you fully understand the worst that could happen. You will then be prepared when it does. If you don't like or are not prepared to accept, go elsewhere.

Remember, Banks & Credit companies are in business to make money out of YOU.

  • 0 recommendations

Very interesting thread,  it seems from the responses of those defending the banks positions e.g. The BankManager & JoeEasdale that there is a disconnect between what the banks actually do and what any business is supposed to do. 

Whatever business you run,  the customer has to come first.  If you don't provide a service that the customer likes then they will leave.  If you're business model doesn't stack up then you don't have a business.  It is an example of how far from standard business practice we have come and how far behind the game the FSA have fallen that banks actually believe that we as customers are obliged to inform them of our every move or accept the consequenses.  as for TheBankManagers assertion that the desk clerk can provide any "service" well my rec ent attempts to procure a temporary overdraft from Santander shows the falacy of that.  By telephone i was granted £100 (not enough for my needs) I was advised to apply online, where up to £1000 was available. I received no response at all from online.  I went into a branch and was shown in to the "branch Manager" who without listening to my needs told me that £100 was all that he was allowed to give, but if I were to consider moving my mortgage to them with the associated costs and tie-ins I would be eligible for a different account with free overdrft facilities.  I tried again to explain that I only required a temporary OD to alleviate the £65 charges they were going to impose on a client of 20 years.  at last he said he would refer my request to an underwriter, although he wouldn't be able to give them any of my supporting information.  True faceless customer service. 

Look,  if your business model doesn't stack up without treating customers like lepers.  please don't run a business! If you can't make money on a business where customers actually give you money in return for looking after it... then please don't run a business. 

oops I forgot the banks have engineered a position where they can pick and choose customers as they please,  pick and choose the rates they charge for their services and are happy to distance themselves from the individuals who depend on these services that the banks have engineered them into.

Dear bankers, please don't be so supersilious as to assume you are in a position to lecture your customers on money management!!  sweet jesus where did it all go wrong.

koifish said

  • 0 recommendations

Hi THERE

I HAD TO LEAVE WORK IN 2007 BECAUSE I WAS DIAGNOSED WITH CANCER

I HAD NO INCOME AND NO WAY OF PAYING A  LARGE AMOUNT OF UNSECURED DEBT £150000

SO I CONTACTED THE BANK AND THE CREDIT CARD COMPANYS AND ASKED IF I COULD HAVE A DEAL TO PAY IT BACK AND THE ANSWAER WAS TOUGH WE WILL NOT WAIT WE WANT OUR MONEY

WE DONT CARE IF YOU ARE ILL

THE DEAL WE ASKED FOR BY THE WAY WAS OVER 4 YEARS TO PAY IT ALL BACK AS MY GIRLFRIEND HAD A GOOD JOB

THE BANKS AND CREDITCARD COMPANYS SAID WE WANT OUR MONEY SO THEY  SET ABOUT GIVING ME HELL

SO I THOUGHT WELL IF YOU WILL NOT HELP STUFF YOU LIFE IS BAD ENOUGH DEALING WITH CANCER ANYWAY SO I GOT A DEBT MANAGMENT PLAN FOR YES £150,000 POUNDS FROM A  GREAT COMPANY AND PAY IT BACK EACH MONTH TO THEM AND ITS GOING TO TAKE 108 YEARS TO MY CREDITORS  

STARTING TO GET BETTER LOOKING FORWARD TO LIFE AND NOT HAVING CREDIT ANYMORE

  • 0 recommendations

I fell foul of the 'miss two payments' thing with the Co-op Bank. My CC balance was £8. They removed my entire credit limit save £500. On querying why they had not implemented the direct debit I'd completed (and they had tested - as confirmed by my bank) they refused even to have the conversation until I'd been "talked to by debt management".

Whatever JoeBanker or whatever he's called says about employees, this woman thoroughly enjoys her job hectoring customers and taking a superior attitude as though you are a delinquent four-year-old. If she wasn't dressed in leather and waving a whip, she certainly sounded as though she was.

Some people go into their jobs because they are natural bullies.

Oh, and the reason for the drastic cut? Barclaycard had been raising my available credit each year without flagging it to me, so I had £17k of unwanted, unused and unasked for credit which then legislated against me as a 'risk'.

Lovely.

nosbort said

  • 0 recommendations

I have trouble with the concept that you can criticise the banks for irresponsible lending in one breath and then criticise them for keeping a close watch on the borrowers in the next.

  • 0 recommendations

Harajus, fair comment that in your opinion staff (or maybe even me?) have 'to get permission over the phone for everything. So he's as worthless as the bank clerk'.

'Fraid your assumption is wholly incorrect. You see, in my role, I'm like the man from DelMonte and I have the discretion to say YES!

I agree, there are occasions when I require a secondary authority, but they are few and far between.

Having been in the Bank for over 25 years, I'm Customer Driven and that's ingrained into me. I used to work very successfully with customers suffering from debt problems and now I'm back to sanctioning. My appraisals confirm I'm successful in both roles.

The only downside, is that even though I do a quality job and I endeavour to make my customers happy, I'm with the many thousands of staff who don't qualify for any other recognition, outside of salary.

The thing is, banking/finance is NOT the only sector that incentivises staff, since this happens in retailing, the food industry and especially in car sales, but hey, bankers are in the news and are easy prey to lump together the public's anger.

So all I wish to suggest to you Harajus, is you're inaccurate.

ticktock, I think you'll find that in a democracy, all retailers, not just Bank's and credit companies, 'are in business to make money out of YOU' and me!

Harajus said

  • 0 recommendations

Bank Manager,

I know that as individuals many workers are great, just like in the NHS. But when a company gets big top brass lose touch with their real customers because they won't relinquish any of their power. So the customer doesn't feel they're talking to the decision maker any more. You might be one of few left then.

aland said

  • 0 recommendations

WELL I KNOW BY EXPERIENCE THAT AFTER THE 6/7 YEARS EVEN IF YOU STILL HAVE LARGE AMOUNTS OF DEBT YOU WOULD BE ABLE TO START AGAIN SO WHY IF IN A DEBT MANAGEMENT PLAN DOES IT NOT STAY ON CREDIT FILE UNTIL THE DEBT IS SATISSFIED AT LEAST HOWEVER LONG

Join the conversation

Please sign in or register to add a comment or recommend.

Our top deals

Credit card
company
Balance transfers rate and period Typical
APR
Apply
now

Barclaycard Platinum with 16 Month BT Visa

0% for 16 months
(2.9% fee)
Typical 16.9% APR (variable) Apply

Virgin Money Credit Card MasterCard

0% for 14 months
(2.98% fee)
Typical 16.6% APR (variable) Apply

Egg Visa

0% until 1st Oct 2011
(3% fee)
Typical 17.9% APR (variable) Apply
W3C  Thank you for using Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels