In the case of a collection account, it is always in your best interest to have the tradeline completely removed from your credit report as opposed to having it show paid.
If the account is NOT a collection or P&L, then the opposite may be true. Let's say you have a credit card with 6 late payments being reported to your credit history. You negotiate with your creditor to have all the late payments removed from the tradeline, showing that it has been paid as agreed, never late. This would be better then to have the entire tradeline removed, as the now clean payment history will help to raise your FICO score. Having it removed will not have as positive an effect. You will lose all the credit history associated with the tradeline, as well as (if it is a revolving account), available credit. Not having sufficient credit history can be just as detrimental as having bad credit.
Hope this helps!
Negative entries will remain on a credit report until the required time period of seven years has elapsed. Neither the original creditor nor a collector can have the entry removed, but it can be noted as "paid as agreed", "paid in full" "satisfied" and so forth.
Yes, if the monthly payment is not the minimum amount agreed upon, a breach of contract has occurred on the part of the account holder and the creditor may take whatever action they decide is warranted.
When a purchase on account is made, the invoice becomes a legal document detailing the transaction between the buyer and the seller. It serves as a record of the goods or services purchased, the agreed-upon terms of payment, and any applicable discounts or fees. The invoice also establishes a financial obligation for the buyer to pay the seller within the specified time frame.
When you signed up for the credit card you agreed to pay for any debt that you incurred. If your promise is worth anything, you are obligated to pay your debt. Failure to pay the debt will probably result in legal action by the credit card company and no doubt will result in a bad credit rating, making future loans more difficult. If you don't pay the debt, they will get you. At some point in the future, you will wish that you had paid the debt. The outstanding balance and any applicable interest or fees will remain valid until paid as agreed. If the account holder defaults on what is owed, the creditor can remand the account to collections and/or pursue legal options such as arbiration or a lawsuit.
Direct Debit - when a payment is made to a person/company direct from your bank account (eg an electricity bill). These things have to be formally agreed and set up before they can be used. Saves you writing a check/cheque and posting it off.
Sadat
No they cannot add an account if the co signer only agreed to one account.
Fair Credit Reporting Act requires that the creditor report your payment status accurately. That means that if you agreed to pay a certain amount on a certain day, then your account is "paid as agreed". If you miss a payment for any reason other than bank error, the account has not been paid as agreed no matter what the reason for the late payment. If you have medical issues that prevent timely payment, the best arrangement would be to make arrangements with the creditor prior to the conditions of the agreement not being met.
Confederate President Jefferson Davis held a cabinet meeting on April 13, 1865. At that meeting the cabinet and Davis agreed that it was time to negotiate with Union General Sherman to agree to surrender terms.
yes, he agreed completely with the Bill of Rights. He signed it.
This means out of the total number of accounts you have, you have not paid on enough of them as agreed when you where issued the account. Example would be late payments.
If a cheque is drawn on an account which has no funds in it then the bank is not obliged to honour it. In fact, unless the account has an agreed overdraft facility they won't honour it.
Do what you agreed to do. Pay the lender.
He can be removed by a resolution of the Rajya Sabha passed by an absolute majority and agreed to by the Lok Sabha.
Negative entries will remain on a credit report until the required time period of seven years has elapsed. Neither the original creditor nor a collector can have the entry removed, but it can be noted as "paid as agreed", "paid in full" "satisfied" and so forth.
The co-signer will be required to pay off the debt. That's what they agreed to when they co-signed so that the primary could get the account.
If there was money involved in the gaming account and if you have literal proof that it was hacked maybe. But first check out the terms and guidelines because if they have a disclaimer then you have no case (you already agreed to their terms)