| Annual Fees
- A yearly fee charged by credit grantors for the privilege
of using a credit card.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR) - The cost of
credit at a yearly rate.
Applicant - A person applying for credit privileges, employment
or some other benefit.
Asset - Any thing you own that has value or
use.
Authorized Account User - The person authorized
by the contractually responsible party to use the account.
Bankruptcy - A proceeding in U.S. Federal Court
that may legally release a person from repaying debts owed. The
law contains several chapters which relate to different methods
of relief:
- Chapter 7 - Straight Bankruptcy (total liquidation of assets)
- Chapter 11 - Business Reorganizations
- Chapter 12 - Farm Debt Bankruptcy
- Chapter 13 - Wage Earner Repayment Plan
Bankruptcy Discharged - A court order terminating
bankruptcy proceedings on old debts.
Bankruptcy Dismissed - A court order that denied
one's bankruptcy petition making the debtor still liable for all
debts.
Budget - A financial plan for saving and spending
money.
Charge Card - A card which requires payment
in full upon receipt of the statement.
Charge Off - Accounting term to indicate that
the creditor does not expect to collect a balance owing on an
account.
Collection - Account Refers to the status of
an account owed to a creditor when it has been transferred from
a routine debt to a Collection Department of the creditor's firm
or to a separate professional debt collecting firm.
Consolidation Loan - A loan usually obtained
for the purpose of reducing the amount of the payments of bills
owing by consolidating the bills into one loan payment. The consumer
pays off several bills with the proceeds from one loan and is
left with one consolidated monthly payment.
Collateral - Property acceptable as security
for a loan or other obligation.
Consumer - Person who uses and/or buys goods
and services for family or personal use.
Consumer Credit Counseling Service - Organizations
that help consumers find a way to repay debts through careful
budgeting and management of funds. These are usually nonprofit
organizations, funded by creditors. By requesting that creditors
accept a longer pay-off period, the counseling services can often
work out a successful repayment plan.
Co-Signer - Person responsible for repaying
a debt if the borrower defaults.
Credit - A trust or a promise to pay later
for goods or services purchased today.
Credit Card - A rectangular piece of plastic
used instead of cash or checks authorizing payment for goods and
services.
Credit Grantor - Person or business furnishing
consumer goods and/or services on credit.
Credit History - Record of how a consumer has
paid credit accounts in the past, used as a guide to determine
whether the consumer is likely to pay accounts on time in the
future.
Credit Limit - The maximum amount of money
you can charge on a particular credit account.
Credit Repair - Companies Individuals or Companies
that promise to "clean-up" or "erase" your
bad credit and give you a fresh start. Also known as Credit Clinics.
Credit Report - A record or file to a prospective
lender or employer on the credit standing of a prospective borrower,
used to help determine credit worthiness.
Credit Reporting Agency - A company that gathers,
files and sells information to creditors and/or employers, to
facilitate their decisions to extend credit or to hire.
Debit Card - Purchases are deducted directly
from the consumer's personal checking account
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) - A federal
law that requires lenders and other creditors to make credit equally
available without discrimination based on race, color, religion,
national origin, age, sex, marital status, or receipt of income
from public assistance programs.
Equifax - One of the three major credit reporting
agencies, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.
Experian - One of the three major credit reporting
agencies, formerly known as TRW.
Fair Credit Reporting Act - A federal law,
established in 1971, and revised in 1997, which enables consumers
to learn what information Credit Reporting Agencies have on file
about them, and to dispute inaccurate data in the file. It also
establishes specific permissible purposes for which credit reports
may be requested, and places time limits on how long adverse information
may be reported.
Garnishment - Legal process whereas a creditor
has obtained judgment on a debt may obtain full or partial payment
by seizure of a portion of a debtor's assets (wages, bank account,
etc.).
Grace Period - The period allowed to avoid
any finance charges by paying off the balance in full before the
due date.
Home Equity Loan - A loan based on the difference
of the amount you own on your home, and the home's current market
value.
Installment Loan - A credit account in which
the amount of the payment and the number of payments are predetermined
or fixed.
Interest - The cost of borrowing or lending
money, usually a percentage of the amount borrowed or loaned.
Judgment - The official court decision of an
action or suit. This public record may be listed on your credit
report in matters of money and debts owed.
Lease - A written document containing the conditions
under which the possession and use of real and/or personal property
are given by the owner to another for a stated period and for
a stated consideration.
Lien - A legal hold or claim of one person
on the property of another as security for a debt or charge. The
right given by law to satisfy debt. (A lien must be paid and released).
Mortgage - A lien or claim against real property
given by the buyer to the lender as security for money borrowed.
- 1st Mortgage - Also known as the "primary" mortgage-has
priority over the claims of subsequent lenders for the same
property.
- 2nd Mortgage - Also know as the "secondary" mortgage-is
a loan secured by mortgage or trust deed, which lien is "junior"
to another mortgage or trust.
Permissible Purposes - As defined in section
604 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, only the named reasons for
requesting a credit report are deemed "permissible".
Requests not meeting these criteria must be denied.
Personal Line of Credit - The maximum amount
you can owe at any time, based on your income, debt and your credit
history.
Personal Loan - A loan based on your income,
debt and credit history.
Principal - The outstanding balance of a loan, exclusive of interest
and other charges.
Public Record - Information obtained by the
Credit Reporting Agency from court records, such as liens, bankruptcy
filings and judgments. Public records are open to any person who
requests to see them.
Repossession - Forced, or voluntary surrender
of merchandise as a result of the customer's failure to pay as
promised. There are several types and descriptions of repossession
actions.
Revolving Account - An account that requires
at least a specified minimum payment each month plus a service
charge on the balance. As the balance declines, the amount of
the service charge, or interest, also declines.
Secured Credit Card - A credit card secured
by a savings account that has been established in advance by the
borrower. The amount in the account usually determines the limit
on the credit card. These accounts present no real risk factor
for creditors and are therefore much easier to obtain.
Smart Card - An electronic prepaid cash card, usually sold at
banks and exchanged at face value.
Trans Union - One of the three major Credit
Reporting Agencies.
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