Life’s little surprises always bank on credit facilities. Raj, a 35 year-old executive built his dream house which he financed through credit. To meet his new lifestyle requirements, he went on a spending spree adding more electronics to his foray through his credit card. Little he did realize that his debt slowly was snowballing to a huge sum.
Be it your car’s sudden overhaul, a mobile upgrade or an unexpected medical expense, credit is the immediate answer for many. But beware that these credit opportunities are just sugar-coated debt traps.
Well, there is no one answer to this tricky question. There are some signals which we need to lookout for and get back to the track before things go awry. Read on to learn some of the signs of the debt trap.
What most of us don’t realize that most of the lenders have a grace period for making payments? While these additional days do make us feel great initially, the feel-good factor doesn’t last long. Taking advantage of the grace period can be dangerous. Use these days only for those little mistakes that happen in life. Routine deviation from the actual payment dates is the first sign of danger towards the debt trap.
Take a minute to check yourself. In the last 3 months how many times, you have used the grace period for paying your credit card bills, utility bills, insurance premiums, and the like. In case if you miss the grace period also, then you may need to pay a hefty amount as penalty or interest. This is how most of us fall into the debt trap unknowingly.
Credit cards allow you to spend money you don’t currently have, and to repay what you’ve spent over time instead of all at once. At the offset, when we make small purchases it seems easy to pay them off. The real trouble of the debt trap begins when we start to pay only the minimum charges which barely cover the finance charges. Every small unpaid amount can accumulate over time and when the outstanding balance begins to march north, the ratio of the ‘credit used’ to the ‘credit available’ goes awry. Refrain from pushing your credit limits too far.
This is the most obvious time for you to ring the alarm and awaken yourself from being caught in the debt trap. What might seem to be an acceptable exception for delayed payment for once slowly turns into a practice, tending towards an insurmountable debt. Adding fuel to the fire is when we are levied late charges and penalties for paying only the minimum amount.
The flat rate always makes people fall for it. Flat rates seem cheap but only a few customers realize that it does no good for loans with EMIs. In the flat interest rate, the interest rate is calculated on the full amount of the loan during the entire tenure. It does not consider the monthly EMIs paid, which gradually reduces the principal amount.
As EMI reduces the principal outstanding, these loans should be assessed on the reducing interest rate. The next is the loan processing fees. It is usually 1 to 2% of the loan amount but this can effectively increase the rate of the loan.
Here the customerrs are asked to pay two EMIs in advance. Eg: If you take a loan of Rs.6 lacs at 10% for 5 years, your EMI comes to Rs.12,748. If you pay two EMIs in advance, the net loan disbursed reduces to Rs.5.74 lacs, still, you will be charged for the 6 lacs.
They have ready answers if the customers question them. They distract the customer by pointing to him a mistake in the form, ask for an additional document, or talk about some other features. This is why they make the loan application process very fast. They don’t let customers read and understand the clauses in the loan document. The terms and conditions are anyway given in small font and they are asked to sign quickly.
RBI has asked banks not to charge foreclosure charges on floating-rate loans. The foreclosure charges would be mentioned in the loan agreement but you would have missed reading it if you were in a hurry to sign it.
A regular term plan with annual premium payments (though costlier) is better compared to a single premium insurance cover linked to a loan. If the loan is foreclosed or transferred to another lender, the insurance contract ends.
Selling insurance with a home loan is legal. However, you need not necessarily buy this type of insurance. A bank cannot compel you to buy insurance from it.
Loan agents get higher commissions if they sell costlier products. For example, car salesmen get higher rewards if they manage to sell a bigger car. They try hard to convince a customer to spend more. They would compliment you about your good taste and lifestyle, just to hit your ego and make you spend more (whether you require it or not).
Verbal promises made to you at the time of sale have no meaning once the transaction is completed. You will come to know later that the extended warranty comes with terms and conditions applied.
These fraudsters call you and offer you loans with very attractive interest rates. Once you take the loan, they charge a processing fee or file charges. Once you pay that, they will ask you for more money on some other pretext. This will go on until you stop paying and ask them to disburse the loan and then they would disappear.
Another type of scam is where they say 0% interest on loans. There is obviously a hidden cost. They just want you to buy an insurance policy from them and they keep it as collateral (This is a lie because insurance without a paid-up value is nothing). The idea is to sell you the insurance policy. Once you buy it, they act like processing the loan. As soon as the 30 days free look period to return the insurance policy is over, they will stop taking your calls.
As your debt increases you will soon end up in a debt spiral, which affects your financial position gravely.
Understand the consequences you will face due to this debt trap:
Apart from a bad credit score, the debt trap will impact in the below areas.
Basically, it can lead to the financial stress of two kinds – drains the relationship between you and your spouse, and in dollar terms, strains your financial ability. The total quality of your life goes havoc.
“If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail.” Benjamin Franklin. The key to any problem lies in planning. To ensure that the much sought after boon of today’s time – credit, does not turn into a bane, you could try:
Credit is a bouncing ball, the harder you throw, the faster it rebounds.
We cannot even imagine a life without a credit card nowadays. But it’s never too late to take steps toward building healthy credit; it clears confusion, adds clarity to your financial planning and results in better financial life for years to come.
Take an effort to get out of the debt trap right now. The longer you put it off, the harder it will be to get out of debt and to pay everything off. The hard work is worth it, and when you are debt-free, you will have more money in the monthly budget. A debt pay-off plan helps a person become debt-free. Similarly, a complete and comprehensive financial plan will help you achieve financial freedom. If you want to understand our 360-degree financial planning process, we offer
Skip the queue by registering for your 30 Minute FREE Financial Plan Consultation. Click the ‘‘BOOK YOUR SLOT NOW!’’ button below.
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I really like the way you have presented it.