Debt management is a great solution for anyone considering bankruptcy!
I don't agree about "most folks" being too late by the time they get to debt management. We tried consumer credit counselling 3 times over the past 10 years and each and every time they barely looked at our numbers before proclaiming they couldn't help us, that they highly recommended bankruptcy. That was their first and only suggestion for us. Talk about discouraged.
We refused that option and felt we were left with no options. Our debts got worse and worse especially exploded when the interest rates got jacked up to ridiculous heights.
Earlier this year we heard about debt management and after checking out several with the BBB we picked one that had a high rating. So far we are very happy with the results, are paying our debt back in full which was our goal in the first place.
For most of the people we see on the forums it isn't too late, even when they've fallen behind. I'd encourage anyone to go this route rather than the bankruptcy route.
But here's the problem with Debt Management:
You pay back your debts for five years, which is honorable and decent, true. But during those five years your credit suffers just as badly as it would have if you'd have declared bankruptcy. You won't be able to get credit or, if you do get credit, it'll be at the same interest rate as those who've declared bankruptcy.
Here's another kick in the head for Debt Management: Once that debit is paid in full, your credit will
still have that horrible rating for the next 3 - 7 years while you try to rebuild it using higher interest rates.
You see, the credit card companies continue to report you as being 120+ days behind the entire time you're paying back your debt. Then it takes a few years after it being paid back for your credit rating to straighten itself out.
So if you and your neighbor had the same debt to the same companies, but he declared chapter 7 when you started your Debt Management plan, he'd be out of the woods in 7 years and would have built his credit rating back to where it should be while you'd still be looking at another 3-4 years of bad credit reports.
And don't get me started on what may happen in those 5 years while you're making your payments back to the credit card companies. If you miss even
one payment due to an emergency or job loss, you my friend are back at square one: all bets are off, the contract for lower payments are cancelled, and your credit card companies have all put your debt back at an interest rate of 29%, making you now have to declare bankruptcy anyway and go through another 7 years of bad credit on top of the 4 you just went through paying back your debt.
I've personally watched one family and one single person go through that particular nightmare and I now recommend bankruptcy over Debt Management for anyone who has more than $5,000 in credit card debt. If you had several consumer credit counsellors recommend bankruptcy, I suggest you reconsider your current course of action and decide if you can truly afford to have disasterous credit for the next 12 years instead of just 7 (and more like 4 nowadays).
But don't just take my word for it: pull your credit reports after being on this plan for six months, talk to an attorney, get more information off of credit boards, talk to people who've been through it.