Credit Card Debt Settlement FAQ's
National Debt Settlement Services
How Active Duty Service Members Can Get Debt Relief
Debt Settlement for Authorized Users
Debt Relief and Stopping Collection Agency Harassment
Steps for Self-Debt Relief- How to Reduce Your Debt
How to Rebuild Credit after a Debt Relief Program
Negotiating with Debt Collectors
Lower Payments with Debt Relief Programs
Similarities of Credit Card Counseling and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Debt Relief
How Credit Counseling Debt Relief Works
The Ideal Client for Credit Counseling Debt Relief
Exploiting Non-Profit Debt Relief Status
Why So Much Bad Press for Not-For-Profit Debt Relief Companies?
Failure of Non-Profit Debt Relief Companies to Provide Educational Resources
Abuses of Non-Profit Debt Relief Companies
Finding the Best Credit Counseling Debt Relief Company
Debt Relief for Unpaid Credit Card Debt
Bankruptcy Attorneys Posing as Debt Relief Companies
Avoid Bankruptcy: You May Have to Pay the Debt Back Anyway
When a Bankruptcy Alternative Won
Filing Bankruptcy as a Last Resort
5 Reasons You Should Avoid Bankruptcy
Debt Relief Through Bankruptcy Just Got Harder
Common Mistakes made by Consumer Seeking Debt Reduction and Debt Relief
Saving Your Marriage with Debt Relief
What Makes Up My Credit Score?
Top 5 Reasons People Need Debt Relief
Increasing Minimum Payments to Reduce Debt
Debt Reduction the Snowball Method
Managing Debt - What Are My Options?
Debt Settlement and Consolidation Program
Companies Abusing Their Non-Profit Status for Debt Relief Profits
*Epic Debt Relief is not a credit counseling agency and does not affiliate with any such parties. The company serves consumers with debt settlement plans, and has provided the information below strictly for educational purposes for consumers in need of debt relief solutions.*
The National Consumer Law Center is a great source of information about the goings on of non-profit debt relief organizations. In many cases, these businesses abuse their position by focusing more on profit and sales than on their non-profit claim of educational services to the general public. These companies are allowed to make a profit, but there are limitations on how much they should be making and what part of their business makes up the profitable activities. The IRS mandates that the earnings of a credit counseling agency that is non-profit is limited so that the profits will not benefit any entity of the organization. Ameridebt is the best known example of this type of abuse, and was shut down by the FTC a few years ago.
The most common violation of non-profit regulations among these types of debt relief companies is in the form of earnings. The companies are not supposed to be profit-driven, and yet many directors were earning nearly half a million dollars annually as a salary. There are for-profit companies with directors that don't earn that much. The companies could charge steep fees, take a large portion of payments to creditors for their own services, and work with other companies to get kick-backs when they referred customers to a certain program or company for debt relief or credit assistance.
Some companies get away with the profits simply by funneling the profits into a profitable company. Look at Ameridebt: they funneled their profits into DebtWorks, which was a for-profit business where they made more money, and were able to do so legitimately. Some companies hire telemarketers to enroll consumers in various programs, charging astronomical fees and calling their services ‘charitable'. There are so many ways that credit counseling companies have gotten around their non-profit status to make a buck, which is why you always need to be careful when signing up for programs with companies that claim to be non-profit.
If you want to learn more or if you need debt relief solutions, contact Epic Debt Relief at 877-971-3232.
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