Debt settlement typically has a negative impact on your credit score. The exact impact depends on factors like the current condition of your credit, the reporting practices of your creditors, the size of the debts being settled, and whether your other debts are in good standing. A debt settlement's impact on your credit score will also depend on how much the debt is settled for compared to the original balance and other factors. KEY TAKEAWAYS: Debt settlement can eliminate outstanding obligations, but it can negatively impact your credit score. Stronger credit scores may be more significantly impacted by a debt settlement. The best type of debt to settle is a single large obligation that is one to three years past due. Do not attempt to settle a debt at the expense of falling behind on your other obligations.
Why Debt Settlement Can Ding Your Credit Score
Debt settlement will have a negative impact on your credit score, even though you are reducing your debt obligations. High credit scores are designed to reward those accounts that have been paid on time according to the original credit agreement before they're closed. A debt settlement plan—in which you agree to pay back a portion of your outstanding debt—modifies or negates the original credit agreement. You can use a reputable debt settlement company to help you with the process. When the lender closes the account due to a modification to the original contract (as it often does, after the settlement's complete), your credit score gets dinged. Other lenders may be reluctant to extend you credit in the future.1
How Debt Settlements Work:
Your credit report is a snapshot of your financial past and present. It displays the history of each of your accounts and loans, including the original terms of the loan agreement, the size of your outstanding balance compared with your credit limit, and whether payments were timely or skipped. Each late payment is recorded.
Debt settlement is generally better for your report than a charge-off because it may even have a slightly positive impact if it erases severe delinquency. However, it does not have as good of an impact on your credit as if the debt was paid in full as agreed."2
Try to negotiate with your creditor ahead of time to have the account reported as "paid in full" (even if that's not the case). This does not hurt your credit score as much.
What Type of Debt Should I Settle?
Since most creditors are unwilling to settle debts that are current and serviced with timely payments, you're better off trying to work out a deal for older, seriously past-due debt, perhaps something that's already been turned over to a collections department. It sounds counterintuitive, but generally, your credit score drops less as you become more delinquent in your payments.
However, bear in mind that, if you have an outstanding debt that was sent to collectors more than three years ago, paying it off through a debt settlement could reactivate the debt and cause it to show as a current collection. Be sure to get this straight with your creditor before finalizing any agreement.
A debt settlement can remain on your credit report for seven years.3
As with all debts, larger balances have a proportionately larger impact on your credit score. If you are settling small accounts—particularly if you are current on other, bigger loans—then the impact of a debt settlement may be negligible. Also, settling multiple accounts hurts your score more than settling just one.
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Debt Settlement vs. Staying Current
In your credit history, the most weight is given to payment history, with current accounts having the most impact. If you are behind on other debts, it is important to try first to keep a newer, current account in good standing before attempting to resolve a long-overdue account.4
For example, if you have an auto loan, a mortgage, and three credit cards, and one of those is over 90 days past due, do not attempt to settle that debt at the expense of falling behind on the other obligations. One unpaid account is better than having late payments on multiple accounts.
The higher your credit score before you negotiate a debt settlement, the greater the drop in your credit score. The Fair Isaac Corporation, which sets FICO scores, gives a scenario in which a person with a 680 credit score (who already has one late payment on the credit card) would lose between 45 and 65 points after debt settlement for one credit card, while a person with a 780 credit score (with no other late payments) could lose between 140 and 160 points.5
The exact impact of a debt settlement on your credit score will depend on factors like the amount of debt. A debt settlement can stay on your credit report for seven years and your score could drop by more than 100 points.1
Debt settlement is one of the last-resort options for people who cannot afford to pay their full debt. If you can afford to pay off a debt, it is generally a much better solution than settling because your credit score will improve, not decline. A better credit score can lead to more opportunities to get loans with better rates.
Once a debt settlement is on your credit report, you cannot have it removed. It will likely stay on your credit report for up to seven years. To read more click here.