Martrae wrote:It depends on the doctor/hospital and whether they report it or not. It used to be that medical bills didn't affect your credit score, though. That may have changed...not really sure now.
The best suggestions I can give you is:
Start with the smallest dollar amount you owe and pay it off (while making minimum payment on everything else). Use the money you were paying on that bill to start paying on the next smallest bill. Work your way up the bill chain that way until they are all paid off.
Cut up your credit cards. Seriously. And don't get new ones.
Consolidating will do nothing if you don't change your spending habits/get rid of the credit cards. You'll just wind up deeper in debt.
I agree with most of this, except the cutting up of the credit cards. Of course if you have 10 credit cards, yeah cut some of them up. But if you pay off all of your credit card debt, and then cut them up it will actually hurt your credit score in the future.
This is because part of your credit score is (large part actually) is AVAILABLE credit. If you, a year down the line, want to get a new car, by cutting up the credit cards it has actually lowered your score for a dealer to look at.
Lets assume in the following scenario, everything but the number of credit cards is the same.
If you have 5 credit cards with $2,000 max on them, and have a grand total of an average of $750 charged balance on each card, you are carrying a total of $3750 of debt.
The next guy has 1 credit card that has a $2000 card, that only has $1000 balance on it. Because this guys "available credit balance" is much lower than the first case.
Even though the first case is actually deeper in debt, his available credit balance is more, wich does effect your credit score.
Deffinaly cut up SOME cards, but not all. Always have some available credit to you. It will be much easier to get credit in the future if you need/want it.
I personally made the mistake of cutting up all my credit cards after paying them off. I was roughly $70K in debt from when i broke my leg. 3 surgeries (no insurance, and yes medical bills do go on credit
) i had to live off of credit cards, while racking up debt on my thrice surgically repaired leg.
I dug myself out years later, and cut up EVERYTHING. My credit score actually lowered, even though i was out of debt, and cut everything up. Now it is a pain in the ass to get another credit card, because i had no available credit to go on.