The Benefits of Debt Counselling
All of your debt repayments will be consolidated into one reduced monthly repayment plan
Your assets, including your home and car, will be protected from repossession
Credit providers will no longer harass you with phone calls and threatening lawyers letters in the mail
Your debt counsellor will communicate with your credit providers
Visiting the Debt Counsellor
Before you visit the debt counsellor you will need to gather together the following documents:
Copy of your identity document/passport
A copy of your most recent salary/wage slip (If you receive overtime or allowances that are not of a regular nature then the last 6 months are required to determine an average)
Your most recent creditor statements and credit cards
Your last three months bank statements for all your bank and investment accounts
Your last two months credit card statements for each of your cards
Your latest statement reflecting your home loan balance
A list of other debts from friends or family members
The Debt Review Process
This is how the debt review process is supposed to work. If you enter into debt counselling, you should use this as a checklist to keep abreast of the process:
When you apply for debt counselling, you will have to fill out an application form, called Form 16, which you submit, together with all your credit agreements, to a debt counsellor.
The first thing the debt counsellor does is assess whether you are over-indebted or debt stressed, and whether or not your creditors were reckless in granting you credit.
The debt counsellor has 30 business days, from the date of your application, in which to make this determination
Within five business days of accepting your application for debt counselling, your debt counsellor must inform all your creditors and the credit bureaus of your application. The debt counsellor does this by sending your creditors a prescribed form (Form 17.1) and calling on them to issue a certificate of balance (which is a “certified notice of the balance of a customer’s account, and accrued interest and charges, at the close of business on a specific date”).
So that you continue to pay your creditors throughout the process, your debt counsellor will draw up an interim repayment plan, which he or she must submit to a registered payment distribution agency (PDA).
During the first 60 business days from the date of your application to be placed in debt counselling, legal action may not be taken against you in respect of debts that are “under review”. This means that if the credit provider has not already proceeded with legal action against you, you have two months in which to negotiate a payment arrangement. But if your creditors have already begun taking action against you in respect of certain of your debts, you don’t enjoy this protection, and these debts can be excluded from debt counselling.
Within five business days of receiving a Form 17.1, your creditors are required to provide your debt counsellor with certificates of your account balances. This information helps the debt counsellor to determine whether or not you are over-indebted and to conduct an affordability assessment. The affordability assessment is aimed at working out how much you can realistically afford to spend on debt repayments.
Once your debt counsellor has determined whether you are over-indebted or debt stressed, he or she is obliged to follow a certain procedure as prescribed in the National Credit Act. The procedure will depend on the debt counsellor’s determination.
If your debt counsellor determines that you are over-indebted and legally eligible for debt counselling, he or she must notify all your creditors and the credit bureaus of this by sending them a prescribed form, Form 17.2, marking the appropriate paragraph that confirms you are over-indebted.
If your debt counsellor determines that you are not over-indebted or eligible for debt counselling, he or she must reject your application and send a Form 17.2 to all your creditors and the credit bureaus, marking the paragraph that confirms that you are not over-indebted.
If all your creditors accept your debt counsellor’s repayment proposal, your debt counsellor must obtain a consent order from the National Consumer Tribunal or a magistrate’s court, again within 60 business days .
If you or any of your creditors rejects the repayment proposal, your debt counsellor must refer the matter to a magistrate’s court with a recommendation, which he or she will seek to have made an order of court. A magistrate can reject the debt counsellor’s recommendation if he or she considers the proposal unreasonable. Unless the magistrate gives the counsellor another chance to improve on the proposal, this has the effect of a termination of the debt review process.
If you or any of your creditors rejects the repayment proposal, your debt counsellor must refer the matter to a magistrate’s court with a recommendation, which he or she will seek to have made an order of court. A magistrate can reject the debt counsellor’s recommendation if he or she considers the proposal unreasonable. Unless the magistrate gives the counsellor another chance to improve on the proposal, this has the effect of a termination of the debt review process.
If your creditors accept the repayment plan, or if a magistrate’s court agrees to the repayment plan, a PDA will channel your revised payments to your creditors. You make these payments directly to the PDA. The PDA is responsible for providing monthly statements to you and payment schedules to your debt counsellor and creditors, as well as attending to queries from the respective parties. (You can be charged three percent of distributable income by a PDA, but this is capped at R500 a month.)
Once all of your debts have been paid, your debt counsellor will issue you with a clearance certificate and will notify the credit bureaus that you are no longer in debt counselling. The fact that you were in debt counselling will be expunged from your credit record, but if you had judgments against you, these will remain on your record for the remainder of the five-year data retention period.
Any Questions?
- Assess the full extent of your debt situation
- Assess your assets that may be taken into account
- Provide a debt remedy that:
- Provide you with an acceptable standard of living while repaying your debts according to your affordability – this includes retaining the home and a vehicle where possible;
- Provide you with an agreed, affordable and realistic monthly budget in order to resolve the situation in the shortest possible time;
- Provide a repayment scheme acceptable to your creditors and confirmed by the Court;
- Prevent repossession of assets where possible;
- Rehabilitate you without detriment for the future; and
- Allow you to get on with your life.
- To work honestly and openly with the debt counsellor;
- Declare all assets and liabilities – including all incomes and debts, and including bonuses and salary increases;
- To pay the registration and debt counselling fees as disclosed at the first meeting;
- To adhere to the agreed instalments and to pay these at the agreed dates;
- To keep in regular contact with the debt counsellor for the full length of the agreement; and
- To agree and commit to the debt remedy – this may include surrendering credit cards, closing accounts and realising some assets.
- To work with the debt counsellor to assist in the normalisation of the debt;
- To favourably consider the repayment proposal;
- To ensure the consumer is assisted in a fair and unbiased way throughout the process of repayment;
- To assist the consumer to rehabilitate as soon as possible and to assist the consumer to restore his/her credit worthiness as soon as possible.
A copy of your spouse/partner’s most recent salary/wage slip (if you receive overtime or allowances that are not of a regular nature then the last 6 months’ are required to determine an average)
Your most recent creditor statements and credit cards
Your last two months bank statements for all your bank and investment accounts
Your last two months credit card statements for each of your cards
Stay In Touch