


It is important to note that when you contact a collection agency and barter down a payoff amount that it will show on your credit report as "settled less than amount owed". If an account has just gone into collections, try contacting the original creditor and paying them directly. You may be able to negotiate fees and finance charges being "removed" and then paying the debt in its entirety. Make sure you get a letter from the creditor stating the debt has been paid in full.
Not only will your mortgage advisor have answers and resources available to answer any questions, they will also have trusted relationships to recommend for your home purchase, your credit issues and your over-all financial goals.
If you have fallen victim to collection agency harassment, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) has provisions that grant you certain rights against abusive collection tactics. Under the FDCPA, a debt collector cannot make false or threatening statements and misrepresentations about his identity, behave in an abusive or oppressive manner, contact you before 8 AM or after 9 PM, or threaten to take your home.
Remember that collections will stay on your credit report for 7 years. If you have obtained your credit report and notice that there are collections on there for more then 7 years, then you should dispute it with the three major credit bureaus. The old collections dropping ff should raise your cedit score.
If you do negotiate a lower pay off than what original collection was for make sure you get a written pay off statement for the new amount. Also get verification that the payment was received and a letter stating that the debt has been satisfied. Keep this documentation filed away in a safe place. If you check your credit annually follow-up to see that the pay off of the collection was reported, if it wasn't provide the documentation to the credit reporting agencies to get the report corrected.
Not all collection accounts need to be paid off. In many cases when buying a home or refinancing, the only items that need to be paid off or addressed are those items that appear on title. This is not a conforming guideline, but nonetheless is a loop-hole around having to pay them off at the time of buying or refinancing your home.
Repairing your credit, or restoring as some like to put it, is best done by a professional company. Your mortgage broker will refer you to a reputable company that can remove items like collections from your credit file. As a general rule, if it can go on your credit, it can come off too. The 7 year rule is only the maximum amount of time a derrogatory can stay on your credit file.
Most sub prime and Alt-A lenders will ignore open medical collections completely. Also most of these aggressive lenders will over look a certain dollar amount of collections that were opened inthe last 12 months. And most collections older then 24 months will be ignored by most sub prime and Alt-A lenders.
Some lenders allow all collections, judgements etc to stay open, as long as your score meets the criteria. If you have re-established credit and have a score in the upper 500's, you can still qualify for 100% financing while having open, old collections. The best course of action is to contact a mortgage professional to analyze your situation.
The new allowable limits for collections on your credit report is $5000.
If your credit report show $5000 or less you may not have to pay them off. If it is over the $5000 then all of the collections will need to be paid.
If you are recieving a non conforming/subprime loan the guidelines vary greatly and you may not have to pay any off.
It is also important to keep in mind that updating credit reports can take some time. Even if you paid all your collections today, it could still take 30-45 days before this reflected on your credit report. The most important thing is to get every interaction with your creditors in writing. If your arrangements are not in writing, they may not mean anything.

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