Making Your Credit Cards Disappear 

Hi Scott,
 
In your recent column (“Thanks for NOTHING, Barefoot”), I was, like you, shocked when Lisa blatantly decided to stop paying her credit card debt, which somehow seemed to magically make her debt disappear into the ether. 
 
At the same time, curiosity got the better of me (for the record, I’m debt free thanks to your book). From a quick Google read, it seems possible to essentially make a debt disappear! Apparently there is this thing called a statute-barred debt which (if certain conditions are met) means you can walk away from having to pay old debts. However, I feel I do not fully understand if and when this may apply to someone. Could you please explain it to me in simpler terms so my smooth brain can understand it?
 
Tim

 
Hi Tim,
 
In the olden days, you’d be locked up in debtors’ prison, and only released when you coughed up.
 
Today the law is more civilised: you no longer get put in jail, and there are limits for how long a lender can chase you for the debt.
 
So here’s the spell to get your credit card wiped:
 
Lenders have six years to chase up an unsecured debt like a credit card. If at that time you haven’t made a repayment, or admitted that you owe the money, then it gets classified as statute-barred debt, and you legally no longer have to pay it.
 
Abracadabra!
 
Sounds like magic, right? Just wait out six years and you’re home free!
 
Yeah, nah.
 
In reality, lenders are very aware of the law, which is why they’ll generally take you to court to get a judgment against you, which both ups the ante and extends the period they can chase you for (to 15 years).
 
And if your lender still can’t get you to pay, they can sell your debt off to a debt collector, and then they will hassle your kneecaps off … for years.
 
Thankfully that will never apply to you, Tim.

Scott.

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