By Mary Rowland
What could be worse than being head over heels in debt with little hope of climbing out?
Try this: Your child (parent, significant other) is head over heels in debt and your name is on the loan.
It happens all the time. I remember meeting a 41-year-old photographer who had recently divorced and inherited $21,000 of his ex-wife's debt. A friend who thought he was involved in a great relationship started picking up the tab for his soon-to-be ex-partner. A parent co-signed for a credit card for her college-age daughter and is now stuck with $30,000 in credit-card debt.Check out your options.
Shop for rates
before you borrow.
For those of you who are toying with helping out a partner, parent, sibling or child, don't do it by co-signing a note. Adding your name to someone else's debt is a very serious financial step.
"You should never co-sign a loan," says Lynn Brenner, a personal finance columnist. If the primary borrower gets behind in payments, "the bank will come after the person they have the greatest chance of collecting from. If they thought they had a good chance of collecting from your son, they wouldn't have required a co-signer in the first place."
What could be worse than being head over heels in debt with little hope of climbing out?
Try this: Your child (parent, significant other) is head over heels in debt and your name is on the loan.
It happens all the time. I remember meeting a 41-year-old photographer who had recently divorced and inherited $21,000 of his ex-wife's debt. A friend who thought he was involved in a great relationship started picking up the tab for his soon-to-be ex-partner. A parent co-signed for a credit card for her college-age daughter and is now stuck with $30,000 in credit-card debt.Check out your options.
Shop for rates
before you borrow.
For those of you who are toying with helping out a partner, parent, sibling or child, don't do it by co-signing a note. Adding your name to someone else's debt is a very serious financial step.
"You should never co-sign a loan," says Lynn Brenner, a personal finance columnist. If the primary borrower gets behind in payments, "the bank will come after the person they have the greatest chance of collecting from. If they thought they had a good chance of collecting from your son, they wouldn't have required a co-signer in the first place."