Wat is Skuldberading – Die Vrystaat

Wat is Skuldberading – Die Vrystaat  ?

BLOEMFONTEIN LOGOSkuldberading in  Arlington,  Free State,,Bethlehem, Clarens, Clocolan, Ficksburg, Fouriesburg, Harrismith, Vrede, Warden, Hennenman, Odendaalsrus, Ventersburg, Virginia, Welkom, Winburg, Frankfort, Heilbron, Kroonstad, Parys, Sasolburg, Villiers, Vredefort, Bloemfontein, Wepener, Zastron   is n proses wat deur die NCR beheer word kragtens die Nasional Kredietwet

 

Skuldberading is n proses waardeur ‘n klient gaan indien hy nie meer sy maandelikse verpligtinge teenoor krediteure kan nakom nie. Met ander woorde as jy te min geld het om jou maandelikse skuld te betaal kan skuldberading vir jou n oplossing wees vir jou skuld.

 

Die skuldberader in Die Vrystaat   sal met elke krediteur ‘n nuwe terugbetalings ooreenkoms onderhandel wat die klient kan bekostig om te betaal elke maand. Terugbetalings word verlaag sonder dat jou uitstaande balans meer word. Om dit maklik te verduidelik: Jou tydperk wat jy oorspronklik gehad het om jou skuld terug te betaal word verleng en sodoende word jou paaiement verlaag

 

As jy aanbly onder skuldberading tot al jou skuld betaal is sal jy geen skuld he nie en dus n nuwe beter lewe kan begin sonder om die foute te maak wat jou in die skuld lokval vasgevang het nie.

 

Jy kan enige tyd onttrek uit die proses van skuldberading en hoef nie te bly tot alles klaar betaal is nie

 

Verligting van skuld is onmiddelik en jy sal dadelik die beskerming van die wet geniet onder skuldberading

 

Kontak ons gerus vir gratis skuldberadings aansoekke In Die Vrystaat

What is debt review in South Africa

What is debt review in South Africa

Debt Review and Debt counselling  is a process in terms of the National Credit Act for over indebted consumers (Over indebted means if you cannot repay all your monthly debt with your current financial situation)

 

The purpose of debt counselling is to protect the over indebted consumer against Credit providers. The first step in the process is to get the help from a registered debt counselor like

Professional Debt Counselling by NCR registered Debt counsellors – the Freestate

Professional Debt Counselling by NCR registered Debt counsellors – the Freestate

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We Can Help You Get Debt Free!‎ and prevent legal action and repossession

 

Lower Monthly Payments‎  by up to 60%

 

Don’t wait untill it is too late

 

Free Debt counselling applications (T’s&C’s apply)

 

 

 

Dont wait

If you are in arrears with your accounts, dont wait for legal action to start. Get protection TODAY

 

Debt counseling process

The debt counselling process is very easy to understand. You basically get the opportunity to pay a reduced monthly repayment towards your debt

 

Important questions

Is this a loan?

Absolutely not. Debt counselling is not a loan

Can I exit debt counselling?

Yes you can. At any time you can withdraw from the process

Is debt counselling binding to my creditors?

Debt counselling is the only process where your orginal agreement can be altered and be enforced

 

When to use debt review

If you are struggling every month to repay your debt at the cost of the quality of your life then you must concider debt review

While debt review reduces your monthly repayments it allows you to provide better for your family because it leaves you with more disposable income

 

 

Free debt counseling assessments

We provide free debt counselling assessments and we do not charge joining fees

 

Contact us today for debt counselling and debt review in Arlington,  Free State,,Bethlehem, Clarens, Clocolan, Ficksburg, Fouriesburg, Harrismith, Vrede, Warden, Hennenman, Odendaalsrus, Ventersburg, Virginia, Welkom, Winburg, Frankfort, Heilbron, Kroonstad, Parys, Sasolburg, Villiers, Vredefort, Bloemfontein, Wepener, Zastron and the rest of the Freestate

 

 

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Debt counselling Freestate

Debt review and debt counselling Freestate

Help with debt can assist clients in Arlington,  Free State,,Bethlehem, Clarens, Clocolan, Ficksburg, Fouriesburg, Harrismith, Vrede, Warden, Hennenman, Odendaalsrus, Ventersburg, Virginia, Welkom, Winburg, Frankfort, Heilbron, Kroonstad, Parys, Sasolburg, Villiers, Vredefort, Bloemfontein, Wepener, Zastron and the rest of the Freestate with debt review and debt counselling applications

Before a debt management company such as Help with Debt can assist any client with their debt problems, the process of debt review needs to be undertaken. Debt review assists the debt management company in identifying the debt problem at hand, and finding the suitable solution.

Help with Debt performs a thorough debt review process on all their clients, ensuring that all needs are identified, and an accurate solution created.

Help with Debt offers the following to their clients who are searching to undergo debt review:

No upfront fees

No additional loans

One very affordable monthly payment to creditors

No interviews unless you want to have a free consultation

Contact Help with Debt today, and let them assist you through their debt review services.

Contact Details:

Contact Number: 073 053 7756

Fax Number: 086 519 4004

Email: info@helpwithdebt.co.za

Website:http://www.helpwithdebt.co.za

 

 

Is Debt review good or bad?

Is Debt review good or bad?

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We often get the question from consumers whether debt counseling is good or bad.

We wrote this to clarify that it is not a simple yes/no answer but a complex set of answers for both yes and no

Debt counseling is good if……

If you yourself decided and realized that you are over indebted and that you cannot afford your monthly debt repayments anymore

If you pay your debt on time but you do not have enough money left to sustain your current lifestyle.

maintaining your current lifestyle means that you pay your debt and don’t have enough for your living expense like groceries

Debt counseling is good if you want to get a structured plan to get out of debt AND you stick to it

Debt counseling is bad if……

If you manipulate the system to buy time and to try and get extra money every month to spend on unnecessary stuff

If you do not stick to your new budget and keep up with your proposed debt review payment plan

If you ignore the debt counselor and creditors to comply with the provisions of the Act with regards to Debt counseling

 

In short, debt counseling is a very effective tool to assist you if YOU made a educated decision to repay your debt

 

Contact us today with the form below to have a free debt counseling assessment done

Help with debt logo

Important information regarding your application process.

Important information regarding your application process.

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Although the National Credit Act allows protection when your application is received there are three important facts you have to remember.

 

 

  1. Debit Orders

 

The Act states very clearly that all your credit providers MUST stop all debit orders that they

have on your account. The fact is that they don’t bother, leaving you with a “double payment “when you have paid your PDA account as well. This “grabbing” of funds by the credit providers is in direct violation with the Act as the said credit provider gives himself an advantage above others. The Act states that all creditors will enjoy equal benefits and rights. Although the money drawn from your account can be reversed we advise that you open another account (with a bank where you don’t have credit) to avoid this hassle.

 

  1. Final notices (Section 129)

 

According to the Act a credit provider can only refuse to accept your application if a Section 129notice (final notice) have been delivered and the time mentioned in that noticed has lapsed. As we do in our application form, we urge all applicants to be very honest in providing info on these notices. Should there be a 129 notice that has lapsed that account will not be included in your application and subsequently the asset attached to that account will be repossessed.

 

Please take note of this as we cannot be held liable for advising and informing you on your favorable application when this fact is being withheld from us.

 

  1. Calls from creditors

 

Once you have applied for debt review and your details have been submitted to the NCR all creditors will receive notice that your application was made. As a result you will most likely start receiving calls from your credit providers stating you have to pay immediately to avoid legal action. THIS IS HARRASMENT AND EMPTY THREATS AND MUST BE IGNORED!.

 

The reason for the sudden calls is from the COLECTIONS DEPARTMENT and NOT form the Debt review department. Part of the salary structure of collection agents is based on commission the earn as a result of money that they collect from you! NEVER will the debt review department phone you and all other calls from creditors should be referred to us

 

These calls from creditors immediately puts us as your debt counselor in a bad light and creates distrust between you and us.

 

Should you have any further questions or comments please email us at

 

support@helpwithdebt.co.za

 

What is debt counselling – video

When a consumer (client) realizes that he/she is over indebted and that some arrangements have to be made to make sure all monthly repayments are met.

The consumer contacts a registered Debt Counselor who supplies a regulated form 16 and assists with the completion thereof. As soon as this form is completed the consumer will have formally applied for debt review in terms of the Act.

All requested documentation as on the application form is supplied by the consumer within 5 days of signing the form 16.

With the information and supporting documents supplied by the consumer the debt counselor now informs all the known creditors of the consumer that the said consumer has applied for debt review. This is done with the regulated form 17.1 as well as 17.2

A formal analysis is done by the Debt counselor to determine if the consumer is indeed over indebted. This is a very simple calculation once all information has been taken into account. A consumer can only apply for debt counseling if his/her monthly disbursable amount (Nett income minus living expenses) is LESS than the amount required to service all obligations. AS EXAMPLE ONLY. If the consumer only has R5000 to pay his/her debt after the living expenses have been accounted for, and the total monthly debt repayments are R6000 the application would be a success.

If the consumer is indeed over indebted according to the above method all creditors would be informed of this for their record.

The restructuring process can now begin. The Debt counselor will now restructure and renegotiate all credit agreements and present these proposed terms to all creditors. This new proposal will then restructure the consumer’s monthly commitments to be more affordable and ensure that all credit agreements get something every month.

The new proposal will now be sent out to all the creditors after it has been approved by the consumer. Should all creditors agree to a consent order that new arrangement will be made an order of court. If there are some creditors who don’t agree to the restructuring a court date will be allocated for the matter to be heard. At this hearing the magistrate will have no choice to grant the order if the debt counselor acted in terms of the Act and subsequently restructured the debt accordingly.

All disbursements of contributions will be handled by a registered Payment Distribution Agency (PDA). The PDA is regulated and governed by the Act. As soon as a restructuring proposal is agreed on by the consumer payments of the distribution amount will be paid over from the consumer directly to the PDA. The PDA in turn will disburse with the funds as per the restructuring proposals.

The Fee structure:

Debt counselors are entitled to a maximum of R6000 plus VAT for single applications

The Act allows for the following payment of Debt counselor fees as well as Legal fees.

The first payment made by the PDA will pay the debt counselors fee

The second payment will pay the legal fees

The third payment will be the first payment that creditors receive. This is done so that consumers don’t have to pay any money that they might not have up front, and to make the process affordable.

When the payments are being made to the creditors by the PDA there will be some agreements that will be paid up before others. As soon as this happens the Debt counselor must restructure the payments again to make sure any creditor is not paid more than he must receive and to disburse the surplus equally between the other to ensure that the process runs smoothly. For this the Debt counselor is entitled to a 5% after care fee not exceeding R400.

 

Are you facing vehicle or property repossession in the Freestate ?

Are you facing vehicle or property repossession in the Freestate ?

 

Creditors calling every day?

 

Prevent repossession and stop all legal action today!!

 

Debt counselling will lower your total monthly debt repayments by up to 60% without increasing your settlement amount. Meaning you will pay the same amount you owe today, but easier on your pocket. This will give you more money in your pocket at the end of every month. STARTING FROM TODAY!

 

Help with debt, debt counsellors will assist you and your family in the Freestate  with immediate effect to prevent all property and vehicle repossession as well as to stop and prevent all legal action that might lead to the sheriff attaching your loose assets and selling them on auction.

 

We are registered with the National Credit Regulator and pride ourselves with providing fast and friendly service with great after-care to debt review clients in the Freestate .

 

Please visit our website at www.helpwithdebt.co.za OR

SMS “my skuld” your name and email address to 33903 and we will contact you.

 

Questions about debt counselling

Should your spouse apply with you?

If you are married in community of property, you and your spouse must apply for Debt Counselling together, as the law sees your joint estate as one single estate.

If you are married with an ante-nuptial contract, you can apply for Debt Counselling on your own. Your application will only cover your own income, assets and debts, but you must disclose if any of your assets or debts are jointly owned, i.e. not just in your own name.

Traditional African marriages are regarded as being in community of property, while Islamic religious marriages are regarded as being out of community of property.

How will your credit report be affected?

Your credit report will show that you have applied for debt review until a clearance certificate is issued. If you withdraw / your application is terminated / cancelled, this will be shown on your credit record for 6 – 12 months.

When all your debts are paid, a clearance certificate can be issued, and all history of Debt Counselling will be erased from your credit report.

Can you exit Debt Counselling before all your debt is paid up?

Yes. There are four ways that you can exit the process:

* You can choose to voluntarily withdraw from the process at any time.
* Your Debt Counsellor can cancel your application if you are dishonest, don’t disclose all your financial details or fail to follow instructions or advice.
*Your Debt Counsellor can also reject your application if your affordability installment is too low to create a reasonable proposal for your credit providers.
* Your credit providers can terminate debt counselling if you fail to make payments according to the final proposal, if your credit providers are dissatisfied with the amount you can afford to pay or if the requirements of section 86 of the National Credit Act are not met.

NB – Once you have exited the process, your credit providers can immediately take legal action against you for the full outstanding amount owed to them.

Can you access more debt?

No. You cannot and may not apply for any further credit while under Debt Review. This means you cannot use your overdraft, credit cards, retail accounts or any other type of debt. If you apply for further credit while under Debt Review, your application will be cancelled.

Can you skip payments to your credit providers at any time?

No. Although you cannot afford to pay the full installments on all your debts, you must make reduced interim payments to all your credit providers each month to show your commitment to repay your debt. It is your responsibility to make sure that your credit providers receive payment every month, even once the PDA starts making payments on your behalf.

Can you pay more than the amount on the final proposal?

Absolutely. You should continually try to increase your affordability, by increasing your income, reducing your expenses and selling unnecessary assets, to pay off your debt as fast as possible.

If you receive an increase, bonus or any extra income, please let the Debt Counsellor know so that we can pay extra on your debt. This will make your credit providers more likely to consent to your proposal, and will help you to pay off your debt faster.

Can any of your accounts be excluded from Debt Counselling?

If you have received a letter of demand or Summons for a specific account before you sign this Form 16, the credit provider can require the account to be excluded from Debt Counselling. If this happens, you will have to make voluntary arrangements with that credit provider to pay off the debt.

If you have referred the Summons to an attorney, you should inform your attorney that you have applied for Debt Counselling.

Why should you cancel the debit orders that pay your debt?

To avoid double payments when the PDA starts making payments on your behalf.

Also to avoid any of your credit providers deducting more than the amount allocated to them in the final proposal, and not leaving enough for the remaining credit providers. This does not apply to debit orders for debts that cannot be included under Debt Counselling. Please follow up with your bank to make sure that your insurance and other policies will continue to be paid in full.

Why should your salary be paid into a savings account?

To avoid “money grabbing” or “set off” by the bank. While you are under Debt Counselling, you will not be able to access any overdraft facilities. Therefore, if your salary is paid into an account with an overdraft, your salary could be “set-off” to the full amount owed. If your salary is paid into a savings account, you can pay off your overdraft in smaller installments.

Should you keep paying your full insurance premiums?

Your home and vehicle must be insured. This is often a condition of your financing contract. You must keep paying the full installment for insurance and other policies, even while you are under Debt Counselling. The same applies to your rates and taxes as well as maintenance and services for your vehicle.

How long will the whole process take?

According to the National Credit Act, you should have a payment plan and a Court Date within 60 working days (about three months). The actual Court Date will depend on the specific Court.

Paying off all your debt depends on how much you make available to pay. You should be able to pay off your debt between five to seven years if you don’t have a house or car, and 10 to 30 years if you do.

What happens when the Court considers your final proposal?

The Court will consider whether all the steps in terms of the National Credit Act were taken. They will also consider whether they feel the final proposal is a reasonable solution for all parties. If your credit providers oppose the Court application, they will have to consider the credit providers’ arguments, and request certain changes before they can make an order.

Once the Court has made an order, it will be binding on both you and the credit providers. This means that your credit providers must accept payments as per the Court Order, but it also means that you cannot miss any payments, or your credit providers will immediately be able to get a garnishee order against you or repossess your assets. Once the Court has made an order, you will not be able to withdraw from Debt Counselling.

What you should know befor you apply for debt review

Debt counselling was introduced by the National Credit Act (NCA) in 2007. Since then, about 402 000 consumers have applied for debt counselling, over R10 billion has been paid to credit providers by consumers in debt counselling, and every month about R255 million is collected from consumers in counselling and paid over to their creditors. It is estimated that 110 000 consumers are in debt counselling.

Statutory debt counselling is designed to provide over-indebted consumers with an alternative to the traditional remedies for defaulting on your debt: administration and sequestration.

There are disadvantages to both administration and sequestration. For example, you may apply to have your debt placed under administration only if your total debt is less than R50 000, and the administration charges are high at 12.5 percent of every installment paid. And when you go into sequestration, you lose your assets and have to obtain permission from the court-appointed trustee if you want to borrow money. Credit Ombud Manie van Schalkwyk says this is disempowering for the consumer.

Rehabilitation – and, to some extent, empowerment – of the over-indebted consumer is at the heart of debt counselling. One of its big attractions is that the process is regulated and designed to protect you from harassment from your creditors and the loss of crucial assets. Unlike sequestration whereby you must apply to a high court for a rehabilitation order, you can be rehabilitated as soon as the debt counselling process is terminated – with no negative listing remaining on your credit record.

But due to the poor drafting of the NCA and key court rulings in favor of credit providers, consumers in debt counselling can still find themselves cornered by their creditors and may feel let down by the process as a result.

Before you go the debt counselling route, you need to understand precisely what you are in for, including your responsibilities and the rights accorded to you by the NCA.

  1. You may not qualify for debt counselling

Anyone can apply for debt counselling, but not everyone will qualify.

To qualify for debt counselling, you need to be over-indebted as defined by the NCA – that is, you are unable to meet all your financial obligations in a timely manner. This is determined by a debt counsellor and basically means that you can’t repay your minimum monthly installments.

If a debt counsellor finds that you are not over-indebted, you cannot be placed in debt counselling. In that case, you must be issued with a letter of rejection, spelling out the reasons for the debt counselor’s finding. This will leave you with no option but to negotiate with your creditors to have your debts “rearranged” – in other words, your creditors permit you to pay reduced monthly installments over an extended period.

If you are not over-indebted but clearly in danger of becoming over-indebted, a debt counsellor may not place you under debt counselling but may ask your creditors to agree to rearrange your debts “on a voluntary basis”. This means that your creditors reserve the right to take legal action against you to enforce the credit agreement/s.

Kedilatile Malakalaka, debt counselling manager at the National Credit Regulator (NCR), says that if a debt counsellor concludes that you are not over-indebted and rejects your application, but you believe you are over-indebted, you may apply directly to a magistrate’s court for an order.

“A magistrate can order a debt counsellor to put a consumer under debt counselling,” Malakalaka says.

Paul Slot, president of the Debt Counselors’ Association of South Africa (DCASA), says if you have no income, or if you will not be able to repay your debts in a reasonable time, debt counselling is probably not for you.

  1. It’s going to cost you

The bad news for the over-indebted consumer is that debt counselling is not free. The good news is that the fees are regulated in terms of guidelines set by the NCR. This means that, according to the conditions of their registration, debt counselors agree to charge no more than the fees stipulated in the guidelines and disclose to you upfront all debt counselling fees and provide them to you in writing.

The fees are as follows:

* An application fee. A fee of R50 is payable by anyone who applies to a debt counsellor for a debt review – this is an assessment of your finances to determine whether or not you are over-indebted and eligible for debt counselling.

* A rejection fee. If a debt counsellor determines that you are not over-indebted (in other words, not eligible for debt counselling), you are liable for a rejection fee of R300 (excluding VAT).

The application and rejection fees are the only fees that you must pay directly to a debt counsellor. All the other fees are worked into your restructured repayment, which is a single amount paid monthly to a payment distribution agency (PDA). A PDA is an entity accredited by the NCR to collect repayments from over-indebted consumers and to distribute them to credit providers (see point 5, below).

* The debt counselor’s fee – also known as a restructuring fee – is a maximum of R6 000 (excluding VAT), or the first installment of your restructured repayment, whichever is the lesser. This means that if your installment is less than R6 000, your debt counsellor may charge you no more than the installment.

* After-care fees. In addition to the debt counselor’s fee, you will be required to pay a monthly after-care fee, which is paid to your debt counsellor. This is five percent of your monthly installment to a maximum of R400 a month (excluding VAT) for 24 months. Thereafter, it decreases to three percent of the monthly installment to a maximum of R400 a month, until you’ve paid off all your debt.

Slot says the fees listed above are the maximum fees and in practice the debt counselor’s fees paid by consumers are usually much lower. “The average fee ranges between R1 500 and R2 800,” he says.

It is also important to know that, if you withdraw from debt counselling after the debt counsellor has finalized the negotiations with your creditors to restructure your debt repayments, you will be liable for a fee equal to 75 percent of the restructuring fee.

And if your debt counsellor fails to submit proposals to your creditors or refer your matter to the National Consumer Tribunal or a magistrate’s court within 60 days from the date of your application, you are entitled to a full refund from the debt counsellor.

  1. You may be in for some legal fees

Any legal fees for which you are liable must be disclosed to you upfront and in writing by your debt counsellor.

A consent order, for example, will cost you R750. (A consent order is an agreement between you and your creditors on a debt rearrangement plan.) This fee may be deducted only in the second month of debt counselling. If your affairs cannot be resolved through a consent order and there are additional costs for further legal proceedings, these costs must be negotiated with you separately. Your debt counsellor should be able to produce pro forma invoices issued by his or her lawyers for legal services.

It’s important to find a debt counsellor who works with an attorney who is proficient in the complexities of debt counselling matters and who can bring your matter to court within the 60 days permitted for your debt to be restructured.

  1. Some of your debts can be excluded

If, before you applied for debt counselling, you were in default and a credit provider began legal proceedings against you, that debt can be excluded from debt review. This underlines the importance of applying for debt counselling before it is too late.

If terms of the NCA, before a credit provider can launch default proceedings, the provider must notify you in writing of your right to refer the credit agreement to a debt counsellor, an alternative dispute resolution agent, the Credit Ombud or a consumer court in an attempt to resolve any dispute or agree on a plan to settle your debt. This notification from the credit provider is known as a section 129 notice, and it gives you 10 days in which to respond.

Malakalaka says that, although the NCR believes a section 129 notice is a notice of impending legal action in the spirit of the Act, according to recent case law, the interpretation is that the credit provider has already started “enforcing” the debt. In other words, the section 129 notice constitutes legal action and means that the credit agreement is excluded from the protection of debt counselling.

“Consumers need to make sure that they don’t get that letter by staying on top of their debts,” she says.

Slot says this interpretation is “grossly unjust to consumers” in that it denies you a remedy (debt counselling) offered to you in the notice.

“It could never have been the intention of the Act. Where legal enforcement has commenced, the consumer is also required to pay the legal cost of obtaining judgment, which is usually a High Court application,” Slot says.

The important thing to remember about a section 129 notice is that it must be delivered to you, and a credit provider must be able to prove that it was delivered. This is according to a Constitutional Court ruling (in the matter of Sebola versus Standard Bank).

In the past, it was sufficient for a credit provider to show that it had sent a section 129 notice to your address; it didn’t matter whether or not you had received it. Now, if you didn’t receive the notice and the credit provider cannot prove that it was delivered to you, you can contest proceedings on the basis that you did not receive it and were therefore unaware of your rights.

  1. You’re not entirely safe from creditors

Although debt counselling is supposed to protect you from litigious creditors, your creditors can withdraw from the debt counselling process after 60 business days of the date on which you applied for debt counselling. This withdrawal is called termination, and it occurs when a credit provider issues you with a section 86(10) notice. In effect, it means that the credit provider pulls its credit agreement/s out of debt counselling, and can proceed with legal action against you. This notice must be given to you, the consumer in debt counselling, to your debt counsellor and to the NCR.

Section 86(10) of the NCA says that “if a consumer is in default under a credit agreement that is being reviewed in terms of this section, the credit provider … may give notice to terminate the review in the prescribed manner … at any time at least 60 days after the date on which the consumer applied for the debt review”.

In addition to default, the common reasons for termination include:

* The credit provider’s non-acceptance of the debt restructuring proposal put forward by the debt counsellor. If no court order has been obtained, the credit provider can withdraw from the process.

* Short payments, no matter how small the amount. If you agreed to pay your creditor, say, R500 a month and you pay even R10 less, you are in breach of the court order.

Slot says that, every month, credit providers terminate about 3 500 credit agreements and withdraw from the debt review process.

“You can be issued with a section 86(10) even if the matter [your application for a consent order] is pending before a court. Nowhere in the world can a notice by a credit provider terminate a court application. Many credit providers are terminating debt review after 60 days,” he says.

Malakalaka says interpretation of section 86(10) by case law has proved to be one of the biggest loopholes in the Act.

“We believe this is not in the spirit of the Act.

“It is a challenge in some magisterial districts for debt counselors to get matters heard within the 60 business days. But if an order is granted within the 60 days and the consumer is making payments, then the credit provider has no legal right to do this. [However,] if there is a court order, it is binding on all parties. If the 60 business days lapse before the matter gets to court, then the credit provider has the right to terminate,” Malakalaka says.

  1. You’re protected from further indebtedness

When you fall behind on your repayments, you become liable not only for the principal debt, but also for interest and collection costs. Collection costs refer to the amounts that a credit provider may charge to enforce the credit agreement. Enter the in duplum rule, which has been described as “the best-kept secret” in debt counselling.

In duplum, in our common law, limits the interest that a creditor may charge on an account in arrears. The common law rule holds that interest stops accumulating once the unpaid interest equals the outstanding debt. The NCA provides an extension of the in duplum rule by limiting the interest and “all” other costs that a creditor may charge on an account that is in arrears.

According to The Credit Guide by attorneys Nicky Campbell and Stephen Logan: “The NCA … broadens the previous protection to include collection costs that were previously excluded. The maximum amount that can be collected is double the capital amount outstanding at the time the consumer defaulted, including any interest or collection costs. The limit on interest and costs that may be charged therefore protects debtors from exploitation by creditors.”

For example, if you borrow R10 000, and end up owing interest and costs of another R11 000, and repay only R3 000 of the capital, the maximum amount that can be recovered from you is the unpaid capital of R7 000, plus interest and costs up to another R7 000. If, however, the interest and costs amount to only R4 000, the most that can be claimed from you would be R7 000 plus R4 000.

In other words, Campbell and Logan say, the following amounts, when added together, may not exceed the unpaid balance of the principal debt under a credit agreement as at the time that the default occurs:

* Initiation fee;

* Service fee;

* Interest;

* Cost of credit insurance;

* Default administration charges; and

* Collection costs.

Malakalaka says in duplum is a “good weapon” in the hands of a debt counsellor, because all charges stop when they reach [an amount equal to] the outstanding debt.

Slot agrees, but says it is “not implemented or applied by most credit providers”. The credit industry is waiting on the regulator to issue a non-binding opinion on its interpretation of the Act in respect of in duplum, he says.

  1. You will not have access to more credit

In terms of the NCA, credit providers are prohibited from lending to consumers while they are in debt counselling, unless the loan is a consolidation loan and does not result in greater indebtedness.

When you enter into debt counselling, this is noted in your credit records (held with the various credit bureaus) and remains there for as long as you are in debt counselling.

The effect is that you are not eligible for more credit until you are issued with a clearance certificate by your debt counsellor. The repercussions of this are far-reaching, especially if you have a home loan, which usually has a 20-year term. Assuming you were granted a home loan last year and you enter into debt counselling this year, you will be issued with a clearance certificate only once all your debts – which includes your home loan – are paid. So, for you, that could be 19 years from now.

Logan says this ought not to be the case. “The idea is to terminate debt counselling as soon as the consumer is financially stable and able to resume normal monthly repayments. In most cases, consumers are able to resume their normal monthly repayments within five years.”

Given the cost of extended credit terms (the cost of paying over a longer period, such as a home loan extended from 20 years to 30 years), Logan says consumers should remain in debt counselling only in cases where credit providers have agreed to substantially lower interest rates.

“Debt counselors have a perverse incentive to keep clients in debt counselling for as long as possible because of the annuity income that they derive (as a percentage of your repayments),” he says.

  1. Not all debt counselors are alike

The competency and skills of debt counselors differ significantly, according to an assessment of debt counselling in South Africa by the University of Pretoria Law Clinic last year. Some debt counselors are highly skilled and professional, whereas others provide substandard services to clients.

Finding a debt counsellor is easy, but finding a good one is anything but. Word of mouth is often a good gauge, but since people are generally ashamed of being in debt, not many will admit to being in debt counselling, let alone volunteer a recommendation.

Van Schalkwyk says it is “very difficult for a consumer to ascertain” whether a debt counsellor is any good. “Before engaging the services of a debt counselors, it’s imperative to check the regulator’s website to ensure that the debt counsellor is registered.”

Logan suggests that clients do a site visit and check whether the debt counselor’s offices appear neat and well organized. Malakalaka says you should also look out for the registration certificate bearing the NCR’s logo, as well as the window decal, which should be prominently displayed where the debt counsellor practices.

The number of years the debt counsellor has been in business and other qualifications, such as the counsellor also being an attorney, are good indicators of competence, he says.

Call the NCR on 0860 627 627 for a list of registered debt counselors or go to http://www.ncr.org.za and click on “Register of registrants” at the bottom of the home page.

Only people who are qualified and who are registered with the NCR may offer debt counselling services. “Also find out if the they belong to an industry association, which is usually a good sign,” Van Schalkwyk says.

When a credit provider gives you credit without checking your credit record, or fails to determine that you understand the risks and costs of the credit agreement, the provider is guilty of what is known as reckless lending. The NCA makes provision for relief for consumers who have been granted credit that they could not afford.

  1. Reckless lending: you have recourse
  2. When assessing whether or not you are over-indebted, a debt counsellor will check for credit agreements that may have been entered into recklessly. If a debt counsellor believes that your creditors extended credit to you recklessly, he or she is obliged to issue a proposal to a magistrate’s court recommending reckless lending. (Note that this applies only to credit agreements entered into after 2007.)

Even if the debt counsellor finds that you are not over-indebted, you may still be the victim of reckless lending. If this is the debt counselor’s finding, he or she must give you written advice of your right to approach the court within 20 business days (from the date of issue of the rejection letter) to have the credit agreement/s declared reckless and to apply for an order to have your debts rearranged.

Only a court can declare that a credit agreement is reckless. If a court does so, the credit agreement may be fully or partially unenforceable and the credit provider may lose all or part of the money advanced to you. This means that any money owed by you is no longer owed, and any money already paid is either refunded to you or forfeited. The court decides what is appropriate in the circumstances.

Note that you can’t claim that you are a victim of reckless lending if you were not fully truthful when the credit provider did an affordability assessment on you. If the court or National Consumer Tribunal finds that you failed to provide truthful answers and that this significantly affected the credit provider’s ability to make a proper assessment, you lose your right to have the agreement declared reckless.

  1. You can’t wash your hands of your debts

Being in debt counselling is not a “get-out-of-jail-free” card as many consumers mistakenly believe. Your debt is still your responsibility. Van Schalkwyk is emphatic about this: “Debt counselling is not your savior. The consumer in debt counselling needs to take responsibility and to be involved in every step of the debt counselling process. This means making sure that your debt counsellor is doing what they are supposed to be doing. You cannot abdicate responsibility in this process.”

Logan advises you to check that your payments to the PDA are being paid over to your creditors, and make sure that these payments are reflected in your monthly statements from your creditors.

Van Schalkwyk says that debt counselling often falls down at the proposal stage: “The proposal will go to the credit provider, who will, in turn, make a counter proposal. You need to know what that proposal is and if you can afford it. You need to find out what the process is and keep up to speed with your debt counsellor.

“It’s onerous, I agree. But the risks of not being informed every step of the way are way too high: you stand to lose your home or your car.

“We find that a lot of problems with debt counselling stem from the lack of communication between consumers and debt counselors, who are their agents, appointed and paid for. Consumers are only too happy to hand over their problems to their debt counselors, in the misguided belief that all their problems are solved. That is a very dangerous attitude to adopt. Your problems have not gone away, and they are still your problems,” Van Schalkwyk says.

Slot says debt counselling does not provide you with a “payment holiday”.

You must make debt payments every month from the first month that you apply for debt counselling, and while you are in debt counselling, you must make sure that you never miss a repayment, because this will automatically nullify the process and your credit providers will be entitled to take legal action against you.

NOT ALL CREDIT IS ‘EQUAL’

Not all accounts on which you are charged interest are classified as “credit agreements” in terms of the National Credit Act (NCA). Municipal accounts, cell phone accounts, legal bills, school fees, and doctors’ and hospital accounts are examples of “incidental credit agreements”. With these types of accounts, the interest falls due only if you fail to pay for the goods or services on time, usually within 30 days.

In effect, these accounts are treated as if they were a credit agreement only if you default on the payment and are charged interest.

If you are over-indebted, your debt counsellor should be able to include incidental credit agreements in debt counselling. However, some creditors – mobile communications companies, in particular – argue that incidental credit agreements ought not to be included in debt counselling.

Kedilatile Malakalaka, manager of debt counselling at the National Credit Regulator (NCR), says in terms of section 86(2) of the Act, credit agreements (including incidental) where legal steps have not been taken should be included in a debt review. “Non-compliance by credit providers in this regard should be reported [to the NCR],” she says.

The Act caps the interest rate that can be levied in terms of an incidental credit agreement. It is currently two percent a month.

The Act defines an incidental credit agreement as an agreement in terms of which an account was tendered for goods or services that have been provided to a consumer, or for goods and services that are to be provided to a consumer over a long period of time, and where either or both of the following conditions apply:

* A fee, charge or interest became payable when payment of an amount charged in terms of that account was not made on or before a determined period or date; and/or

* Two prices were quoted for settlement of the account, the lower price being applicable if the account is paid on or before a determined date, and the higher price being applicable due to the account not having been paid by that date.