Credit Repair Kit For Dummies

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Now, you can finally end the cycle of bad credit and get back on your feet by following the step-by-step advice and tools in Credit Repair Kit For Dummies, 2nd Edition. You’ll find out everything you need to know about creating a solid plan to get your credit back on track. You’ll discover how to find your credit report, review all of the information in it, and learn how you can repair and spruce it up. You’ll learn how to communicate with creditors and how to budget so that you can pay your bills in full and on time. You’ll learn how to apply these credit strategies to all life situations, from building credit with your life partner to financially surviving a divorce, unemployment, and student loans. You will find out how to safe-guard your identity so that other people don’t damage your credit. Find out how to:

  • Take charge of your credit
  • Get help from credit counselors
  • Request copies of your credit report
  • Know how to interpret your credit report and credit score
  • Avoid foreclosure
  • Communicate with collectors, lawyers, and the courts
  • Manage medical debt
  • Safe-guard your identity

Complete with lists of ten tips to avoid identity theft and reduce damages, ten ways you can prevent foreclosure, ten methods for establishing and improving credit, and ten strategies for handling financial emergencies, Credit Repair Kit For Dummies, 2nd Edition is your one-stop guide to improving and maintaining your credit score and protecting your identity.

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Debt-Proof Living: The Complete Guide to Living Financially Free

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There are plenty of heavily pedigreed personal-finance experts dishing out good advice, but not many who know what it’s like to have to eat ramen all month to make a car payment. On the other hand, there’s Mary Hunt, a recovered credit card addict whose free-spending ways landed her family in the middle of $100,000 of unsecured debt in the early 1980s. Pulling herself out of that morass gave Hunt the courage to strike out on her own as a writer, motivational speaker, and the brains behind The Cheapskate Monthly, a newsletter and Web site (www.cheapsk8.com) dedicated to promoting the art of living within one’s means, a message that grows ever more urgent as the average American family struggles each year to pay $1,200 in interest alone on revolving, unsecured debt.

While Hunt’s previous books have echoed some consistent themes–debt bad, saving good–they’ve addressed a hodgepodge of different areas: building financial confidence in women and kids, doing Christmas without a stack of credit cards, tips for gourmet cooking at low cost. In Mary Hunt’s Debt-Proof Living, Hunt finally puts together a financial primer for all–whether retirees trying to decide when to start drawing Social Security or teenagers ready to sign for their first college loans. Security, according to Hunt, is built with simple tools: tithing, saving, paying off debt, creating a contingency fund for emergencies, driving used cars, owning a home, having insurance.

Although Hunt’s “been there, spent that” zeal and warmth have turned her into the Ann Landers of personal finance, she’s not just an agony aunt for spendthrifts–business experts will find her a savvy marketer who’s using her name and story to build, somewhat ironically, a very effective brand. That doesn’t negate her sincerity, however, or the fact that her advice is sound, her formulas work, and her Rapid Debt Repayment Plan has kept increasing numbers of families out of bankruptcy. And finally, Mary Hunt’s Debt-Proof Living is just a joy to read–its clarity and lack of condescension make it a perfect gift for anyone just starting to understand the basics of money. –Barrie Trinkle –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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