Blog

  • Best Loan Repayment Apps to Help You Get Out of Debt

    Best Loan Repayment Apps to Help You Get Out of Debt

     

    📱 Best Loan Repayment Apps to Help You Get Out of Debt (2025 Edition)

    Managing debt can be overwhelming, but thanks to modern technology, it’s easier than ever to stay on top of your loan payments. Whether you’re dealing with student loans, credit cards, or personal loans, these loan repayment apps can help you budget, automate, and accelerate your journey toward becoming debt-free.

    Loan Repayment Apps
    Loan Repayment Apps

     


    🏆 1. Undebt.it

    Best For: Creating a personalized debt repayment plan
    Undebt.it helps you choose between the debt snowball or avalanche method, track your progress, and set repayment goals. The dashboard is clean and motivating—perfect for those serious about crushing debt.

    ✅ Free with premium upgrade
    🔁 Supports multiple debt payoff strategies
    📊 Detailed visualizations of your progress


    💸 2. Tally

    Best For: Managing and paying off credit card debt
    Tally offers a line of credit to help consolidate your high-interest credit cards. It automatically makes payments on your behalf, helping reduce interest and late fees.

    ✅ Automated credit card payments
    💰 Potential to save hundreds in interest
    🔒 No hard credit check to see your eligibility


    🧾 3. Mint

    Best For: Budgeting while paying down debt
    Mint isn’t just a budget app—it tracks your debts, lets you see due dates, and helps you allocate your income wisely. Perfect if you want to understand where your money goes each month.

    ✅ Free to use
    📱 All-in-one view of your finances
    🔔 Custom alerts for bills and payments


    🧮 4. ChangEd

    Best For: Student loan repayment using spare change
    ChangEd rounds up your purchases to the nearest dollar and puts the difference toward your student loans. Small change = big results over time.

    ✅ Automates extra payments
    💵 On average, users save thousands
    📈 Passive way to chip away at debt


    🔄 5. Qoins

    Best For: All types of debt repayment through automation
    Similar to ChangEd, Qoins rounds up transactions and sends the spare change toward any kind of debt—credit card, student loans, personal loans, etc.

    ✅ Works for multiple loan types
    🏁 Helps you pay off loans faster without thinking about it
    🔧 Custom rules and scheduling


    🗓️ 6. Debt Payoff Planner

    Best For: Planning and motivation
    This app is designed to help you visualize your payoff plan, track payments, and stay motivated with milestones. No extra frills—just solid debt tracking.

    ✅ Easy to use and intuitive
    📊 Graphs show progress over time
    💬 Great for those who love seeing goals in action


    💼 7. Credible

    Best For: Refinancing loans to lower payments
    Credible isn’t a payment tracker—it’s a loan marketplace. You can compare refinancing offers for student loans, personal loans, and more to find better terms.

    ✅ Real-time loan comparisons
    🔍 Doesn’t impact your credit to check rates
    💬 Trusted by thousands for debt relief options


    🎯 Final Thoughts: Which App Should You Use?

    There’s no one-size-fits-all solution, but here’s a quick breakdown:

    If you want to… Use this app
    Automate credit card payments Tally
    Pay off student loans passively ChangEd
    Create a debt payoff plan Undebt.it or Debt Payoff Planner
    Budget your way out of debt Mint
    Explore refinancing Credible

    Whichever app you choose, the most important thing is starting. Combine these tools with consistent habits and you’ll be debt-free before you know it.

  • Insurance And Your Credit Report

    Insurance And Your Credit Report

    A growing number of personal auto and homeowners insurance companies have begun looking at consumer credit information to decide whether to issue or renew policies, or to decide what premiums to charge for those policies. This brochure is designed to help you understand, in general terms, how your credit information is being used for personal auto and homeowners insurance, and how it may affect your insurance purchases.

    Credit Report
    Credit Report

     

     

    Is it legal for an insurance company to look at my credit information without my permission?

     

    Yes. A federal law, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), states that insurance companies have a “permissible purpose” to look at your credit information without your permission. Insurance companies must also comply with state insurance laws when using credit information in the underwriting and rating process.

     

    Why are some insurance companies using credit information?

     

    Some insurance companies believe there is a direct statistical relationship between financial stability and losses. They believe that as a group, consumers who show more financial responsibility have fewer and less costly losses, and therefore, should pay less for their insurance. Conversely, they believe that as a group, consumers who show less financial responsibility have more and costlier losses, and therefore, should pay more for their insurance.

     

    Does using credit information discriminate against lower-income consumers?

     

    Insurers that use credit and entities that have developed credit scoring models state that there is no difference in credit scores among different income levels because there are just as many financially responsible low-income consumers as there are financially responsible high-income consumers. In addition, those companies warrant that factors such as income, gender, marital status, religion, nationality, age, and location of property are not used in their credit scoring models. At the same time, these entities have not addressed factors that may appear neutral on their face but have a disparate impact on protected categories of consumers. For example, some scoring systems consider the source of credit that a consumer uses and consumers who rely on finance companies and other subprime lenders may receive lower credit scores. This may have a disproportionate impact on minorities.

     

    What kind of credit information are insurance companies using?

     

    Although some insurance companies still look at your actual credit report, most companies that use credit information are using a “credit score.” A credit score is a snapshot of your credit at one point in time. Insurance companies and entities that have developed credit scoring models use several factors to determine credit scores. Each factor is assigned a weighted number that, when applied to your specific credit information and added together, equals your final three-digit score ranging from 0-999, depending on the insurance company and the credit scoring model used. Generally, the higher the number, the more financially responsible the consumer is. Following is a list of the more common factors used:

     

    – Major negative items bankruptcy, collections, foreclosures, liens, charge-offs, etc.

     

    – Past payment history number and frequency of late payments; days elapsed between due date and late payment date.

     

    – Length of credit history amount of time you’ve been in the credit system.

     

    – Home ownership whether you own or rent.

     

    – Inquiries for credit number of times you’ve recently applied for new accounts, including mortgage loans, utility accounts, credit card accounts, etc.

     

    – Number of credit lines open number of major credit cards, department store credit cards, etc. that you’ve actually opened.

     

    – Type of credit in use major credit cards, store credit cards, finance company loans, etc.

     

    – Outstanding debt how much you owe compared to how much credit is available

     

    How are insurance companies using credit?

     

    Companies are using credit in two ways:

     

    Underwriting – deciding whether to issue you a new policy or to renew your existing policy. Some state laws prohibit insurers from refusing to issue you a new policy or from non-renewing your existing policy based solely on information obtained from your credit report. In addition, some state laws prohibit insurance companies from using your credit information as the sole factor in accepting you and placing you into a specific company within their group of companies.

     

    Rating – deciding what price to charge you for your insurance, either by placing you into a specific rating “tier” or level, or by placing you into a specific company within their group of companies. Some insurers use credit information along with other more traditional rating factors such as motor vehicle records and claims history. Where permitted by state law, some insurers may use credit alone to determine your rate.

     

    How do I know if an insurance company is looking at my credit?

     

    Some agents and companies will ask for your social security to obtain “consumer information,” “background information,” or an “insurance bureau/credit score.” When an application for insurance is submitted, consumers should ask their insurance agent or company about whether and how credit information will be used in the underwriting and rating process.

     

    Will having no credit history affect my insurance purchase?

     

    Sometimes an insurer will find “no hits,” or “no score,” which means they cannot find a meaningful credit history for you. This lack of credit information could occur: if you’re young and haven’t yet established a credit history; if you don’t believe in using credit and have always paid in cash; or if you have recently become widowed or single and all of your previous credit information was in your spouse’s name. If an insurance company finds no meaningful credit information for you, you may pay a higher rate for insurance, if such rate increase is permitted by state law. Although many companies won’t charge you their highest rate, neither will they give you their best rate. If you know that you have an established credit history, check with your agent or insurance company to make sure they are using your correct social security number, birth date, or other information to find your records.

     

    What do insurance companies consider a good credit score?

     

    A “good” score varies among companies. A good score is a number that matches the level of risk your insurance company is willing to accept for a particular premium. For one company, a 750 score may qualify you for their best (lowest) rate. For another company, the same 750 may not be high enough to qualify you for their best (lowest) rate.

     

    Must an agent or company tell me what my credit score is?

     

    No. In fact, the agent or company underwriter might not even know your actual credit score. Instead, the credit scoring company or model they use may just advise that your score qualifies you for a particular tier or company within the group. However, even if you know your credit score, it may not be useful to you. Since a score is just a snapshot of your credit information on a particular day, your score could change at any time there is a change in your credit activity or a creditor’s report to a credit bureau. In addition, insurance companies use different credit scoring models, so your score could vary from one insurer to another. For example, one company may use three scoring factors (bankruptcies, judgments, and liens) and assign certain weights/points to each. Another company may use those same three factors, but assign them different weights/points, and use two additional factors such as payment history and outstanding debt. Lastly, since the national credit bureaus don’t share information with one another, a score may change depending on which of the three national credit bureaus report the information that goes into the scoring model.

     

     

    If I don’t know my score, and my score varies from company to company and day to day, how will I know if my credit is affecting my insurance purchases?

     

    The FCRA requires an insurance company to tell you if they have taken an “adverse action” against you, in whole or in part, because of your credit report information. If your company tells you that you have been adversely affected, they must also tell you the name of the national credit bureau that supplied the information so that you can get a free copy of your credit report. FCRA defines “adverse action” to include “…a denial or cancellation of, an increase in any charge of, or a reduction or other adverse or unfavorable change in terms or coverage or amount of, any insurance existing or applied for, in connection with the underwriting of insurance…”

     

    Examples of an “adverse action” include:

     

    – giving the consumer a limited coverage form

    – not giving the consumer the best rate

    – not giving the consumer a discount, or

    – giving the consumer a surcharge

     

    In addition, most state laws require insurers to provide clear and specific reasons for any refusal to issue, cancellation or non-renewal of an insurance policy. A reason such as “bad credit score” may not be in compliance with most state laws. Insurance companies differ in how and when they notify consumers about an adverse action. For example, notification could come either verbally or in writing from either the agent or the insurance company, and notification could come at the first policy period or at each renewal.  The best way to know for sure if your credit score is affecting your acceptance with an insurer for the best policy at the best rate is to ask.

     

    How can I improve my credit score if I have been adversely affected?

     

    First, you must find out what “factors” caused your credit score to decline. The agent or company should be able to tell you the top “reason codes” (factors) that resulted in your score. In addition, you must find out what weighted number each of these factors is given to fully understand how your credit score may be improved. Insurers and credit scoring model developers suggest the following ways to improve your credit:

     

    Don’t try to “quick fix”‘ your credit overnight or you could end up hurting your score.

     

    Instead, understand that the most important factors generally are: late payments, amounts owed, new credit applications, types of credit, collections, charge-offs, and negative items such as bankruptcies, liens and judgments.

     

    Create a plan that will improve your credit over time. Pay your bills on time (pay at least the minimum balance due, on time, every month). Keep credit balances low, especially on revolving debt like credit cards.

     

    Apply for new credit accounts sparingly.

     

    Keep at it. Your snapshot will improve over time if you make changes now and continue to improve. If you show good credit behavior over time, your credit score may improve as a result.

     

    What can I do if I suspect that my credit report contains inaccurate or erroneous information that is adversely affecting my credit score?

     

    If your insurance company has taken an “adverse action” against you as a result of your credit, you’re entitled to a free copy of your credit report from the credit reporting bureau they used. However, since the three national credit reporting bureaus do not share information with each other, it is a good idea to obtain a copy of your credit report from each of them because each report may contain the same or different errors and correcting errors on one credit report may not fix the errors with the others. You may have to pay a nominal fee (probably less than $10 for each report). Under federal law, your are entitled to a free copy of your credit report if you have been denied credit or insurance, if you are on welfare, if you are unemployed or if you are a victim of identity theft.

     

    If you find errors in your credit report, advise the credit bureau. In addition, you should immediately notify your insurance agent and company and ask if these errors will make a difference in your insurance purchase and whether the insurance company will defer using your credit information until the inaccurate or erroneous information is corrected.

     

    Don’t wait until the matter is resolved by the credit bureau. Small errors may have little or no affect on your credit score, but significant errors could cause the insurance company to disregard the score and possibly reverse the adverse action.

     

    The credit bureau will contact the reporting entity (bank, Credit Card Company, collection agency, court clerk, etc.) to verify the information. The bureau must investigate and respond to you within 30 days.

     

    If the disputed information cannot be verified, or if the reporting entity agrees that the information is incorrect, the credit bureau must remove, complete, or update the information. Also at your request, the credit bureau must send a notice of the correction to any creditor that has checked your file in the past six months.

     

    If the reporting entity verifies that the information is indeed correct, the credit bureau will not remove the information from or correct the information on your credit report. However, the FCRA permits you to file a 100-word statement explaining your side of the story, and the reporting bureau must include your statement with your credit information each time it’s sent out. Make sure your insurance company has a copy of your statement, and ask if they will take it into account.

     

    Once the errors are removed or corrected, it’s a good idea to obtain a new copy of your credit report several months later to make sure the incorrect or erroneous information hasn’t been reported again.

     

    Most consumer groups suggest that you get a copy of your credit report from all three credit bureaus once a year to make sure there are no errors or to correct them before they become big problems. The three national credit bureaus are:

    Equifax

    Experian

    Trans Union

     

    Where can I go for help with credit problems?

     

    If you can’t resolve your credit problems alone, or need additional assistance, there are non-profit credit counseling organizations that may be able to assist you. In addition, non-profit counseling programs are sometimes operated by churches, universities, military bases, credit unions, and housing authorities. You can also check with a local bank or consumer protection office to see if they have a list of reputable, low-cost financial counseling services.

     

    Some credit repair firms promise, for a fee, to get accurate information deleted from your credit file. Be wary of those entities because accurate information cannot be deleted from your credit record. You have the same access to credit reporting agencies that credit repair firms do and you are entitled to dispute credit report items for free.

     

    Will a less than perfect credit score haunt me forever?

     

    The best way to find out if and when your company will re-evaluate and re-tier or re-assign you is to ask. Some insurance companies look at your credit periodically and will place you in the appropriate company or rating tier based on your current information. If you were originally charged a higher rate because of your credit and you improve your credit over time, you may receive a lower rate the next time the company looks at your credit. Other insurance companies look at your credit only at the time you first apply for insurance. Even if you improve your credit history, the company will not take your improvement into account and you will continue in the higher-priced company or rating tier. Conversely, if you are already in the best priced company or rating tier, you would not be downgraded should your credit history deteriorate.

     

    Where can I get more information?

     

    Ask your insurance agent or company if they have educational material about their use of credit.

     

    Search the Internet, but be sure the information you access deals specifically with use of credit by insurance companies.

     

    Contact the Federal Trade Commission for information about the FCRA or their consumer brochures on credit.

     

  • Legalized Highway Robbery Or Real Financial Help?

    Legalized Highway Robbery Or Real Financial Help?

    Need extra money to get you to the next paycheck? Payday loans come to the rescue. However, you should be prepared to pay the price which is usually a hefty one. But there are steps you can take to minimize the financial damage.

    Legalized Highway Robbery Or Real Financial Help?
    Legalized Highway Robbery Or Real Financial Help?

     

     

    What are Payday Loans?

     

    Cash advance loans, post-dated check loans or deferred deposit check loans are high-rate loans and are intended to be used for short term. Emphasis here is on short term, usually 14 days since most of us get paid bi-weekly.

     

    How does a Payday Loan work?

     

    The old economy created the idea of living paycheck to paycheck. As if that wasn’t bad enough. In today’s economy many don’t even get to the next paycheck. So, the potential borrower writes a personal check payable to the lender for the amount she wishes to borrow plus a fee.

     

    The lender cashes the check and keeps the fee, of course. Ideally this type of loan will get the borrower room to breathe and he/she can pay off the loan when he/she gets paid.

     

    Lets take a look at an example. Ms. Susan Borrower needs $200 and the cost is $30. She writes a check for $230 and the payday lender agrees to hold the check until her next payday that is usually 14 days away.

     

    After 14 days, depending on the particular plan, Ms. Borrower takes $230.00 in cash to the lender and takes back the personal check she wrote. Or, she can roll-over the check by paying a fee to extend the loan for another two weeks. Each time she rolls-over the check, she will pay a fee that in this example was $30. In theory, if she rolls-over the check for one year, she ends up paying $30 for 26 times or $780 for borrowing $200.

     

    How is the payday loan fee calculated?

     

    Usually lenders charge a fixed fee for per amount borrowed. For example $10.00 for every $100.00 you borrow and it can be as high as $30 for every $100.00 you borrow. Ouch and double ouch! This translates to something like 700% annual rate of interest and some people are worried about the 20% credit card interest rate.

     

    How can Truth in Lending Act help you?

     

    Under the Truth in Lending Act, the lenders must disclose the cost of payday loans. So look for them to compare. Among other information, you must receive, in writing, the finance charge (a dollar amount) and the annual percentage rate or APR (the cost of credit on a yearly basis).

     

    What type of collateral should you have?

     

    Your personal check is the collateral. Reverting back to the old days of my word is my bond. But since many people break their words as easily as they would their bonds, lenders make these loans very very expensive so that those who do pay will carry the cost of collection from those who do not pay.

     

    What alternatives do you have instead of payday loans?

     

    Contact your credit union or small loan company, find out if your company offer any short term assistance. I know it could be hard to tell friends and family members about your financial hardship but swallow your pride a little bit and ask them for help. Just make sure that you don’t swallow your pride too much by not paying them on time.

     

    If you are borrowing to pay other debts or other bills, why not just ask your creditors for more time to pay your bills? Find out what they will charge for that service including late charges and additional finance charge or a higher interest rate.

     

    What steps can you take to reduce the cost?

     

    When you need credit, shop carefully. Compare offers. Look for the credit offer with the lowest APR.

     

    Compare the APR and the finance charge (which includes loan fees, interest and other types of credit costs) of credit offers to get the lowest cost.

     

    Some firms will offer you a low cost guarantee that helps you save time in comparison shopping. An example of this type of guarantee is: “Must be a verifiable, bona fide offer from an online payday loan provider. Excludes one-time, promotional offers. Rate comparison must be based on a 14 day loan of less than $500.”

     

    How to cure the problem not the symptom?

     

    Pick up meditation and prayer and I don’t mean bombarding God or whatever higher power you believe in with requests for money. I mean take the time to get to know your higher Self that can help you look at life in a more balanced fashion. This knowledge can help you control emotional stuff which are major reasons for out-of-balance expenditures and emotional spending binges. Who knows, you may even be able to have a direct communication with God and straighten out more than your finances.

     

    Remember that the outer world is just a reflection of us inside and we cannot change our outer circumstances without changing what we think in our hearts.

     

    The need for money usually stems from a combination of low income and lack of disciplined spending habits. Take steps to improve your income which usually starts with better education. Look for ways to improve your education and acquire new skills that can help you get better jobs and higher paying positions. I know it is hard to get enough energy at the end of 50 – 60 hour week to study. But, don’t you rather have the stress of studying for a better future for a limited time than to keep worrying about payday loans for years to come?

     

    Also, with the Internet, you may have small business opportunities that did not exist before.

     

    Take a good look at where your money went during the last six months. If an item shows up over and over, it is no longer a one-time deal. Make a budget that really reflects your monthly and daily expenditures.

     

    If you need help working out a debt repayment plan with creditors or developing a budget, contact your local consumer credit counseling service. There are non-profit groups in every state that offer credit guidance to consumers. These services are available at little or no cost. Also, check with your employer, credit union or housing authority for no-cost or low-cost credit counseling programs.

     

    Finally, if you decide you must use a payday loan, borrow only as much as you can afford to pay with your next paycheck and still have enough to make it to the next payday.

     

    What are the benefits?

     

    So what are the benefits to this payday loan? It sounds like there isn’t any.

     

    With so many companies cropping out every day offering this service and thousands of individuals using them and even offering testimonials to their benefits, I have to concede that there are benefits.

     

    To start with, many times Payday Loans are really the only fast alternative to get you out of a financial jam. The qualification is hassle free. You can get a yes or no answer fairly fast and it can be done online.

     

    In many cases there aren’t any credit checks.

     

    Some lenders do not even require you to fax them documentation.

     

    Your inquiry is kept confidential.

     

    And you can have the cash by the next business day.

  • The Secured Loans Market Infrastructure

    The Secured Loans Market Infrastructure

    With the rise in recent years of Secured Loans or Second Charge mortgages the market has grown both in the volume of loans processed and the number of organisations involved. This article will attempt to break down the market into its individual components and explain, in general, the organisations that make up the Secured Loans Market.

    Secured Loans
    Secured Loans

     

     

    The article is aimed at people involved in the finance sector but will probably prove interesting to those taking out a Secured Loans or to anyone with a general interest in how the wheels of the UK finance industry work.

     

    <b>Secured Loan Lenders</b>

     

    Despite there seeming to be masses of organisations in the media willing to lend money for a Secured Loan or Second charge mortgage there are very few players who actually lend the money. This is because a Secured Loan is considered middle to high risk so there are very few organisations actually willing to underwrite the risk. Although there are only a handful of banks actually putting up the money, you will find that they may also use further downstream organisations to underwrite their own risk. For example, The London Mortgage Company, which now trades under the name London Personal Loans, says it uses up to thirty specialists to underwrite the loans it takes on. In recent years with a fairly stable housing market and strong confidence that there will be no sudden drop in prices there are a few more organisations willing to make the leap into secured loan lending, but the number still remains quite small. It is interesting that in most cases the ‘banks’ that take on the second charge debt are not well known organisations. This is because most of them are not customer facing, but sit behind a myriad of intermediaries, but it is similarly interesting that some well know high street banks also take on the debt, but for various reasons outlined later in this document, they sit behind various brand names or tiered organisations so that, in the end the Customer hasn’t got a clue who they are actually dealing with.

     

    So if there are so few players actually lending the money, then why are we presented with masses of organisations offering Secured Loans? The reasons for this are multi-fold. To give some examples it is down to branding and marketing, due to core competencies (i.e. whether Secured Loans are part of a core business or incidental) and it is also in part due to the different types of media (e.g. television, internet, newspaper and radio) Secured Loans are sold. We will outline these reasons and some others later in the document.

     

    <b>Secured Loan Market Infrastructure</b>

     

    In the main, the infrastructure of the secured loans market is quite confusing. In a simple world it would be made up of banks lending the money directly to the Customer, but in the secured loan world there are several other levels of organisations we need to discuss. Firstly, there are the Brokers – these are organisations that supposedly approach various lenders to get the potential borrower the best deal.

    Secondly, there are Packagers – although there is no hard and fast definition of Packager they are typically organisations that process loan applications and pass them on either directly to the lender or to upstream brokers. Thirdly there are introducers – these are people or organisations that point Customers to a particular Broker or variety of Brokers. For clarity we will look at each one in turn.

     

    <b>Secured Loan Brokers</b>

     

    As the name implies Broker’s have a ‘database’ of Secured Loan providers that they use to match the Customer’s requirements against to ‘broker’ the best deal. Brokers use a multitude of different methods to attract Customers. For example, some Brokers concentrate on running a team of Introducers (see below) to obtain Customers. Other Brokers concentrate solely on newspaper, television and radio advertising and other Brokers focus on the Internet to get their business. Some of the larger Brokers use all the mediums at hand to get business.

     

    What is quite interesting is how the Broker’s use differing marketing techniques to make sure that they get coverage of the diversities of the marketplace. For example, the officious sounding Central Capital (which in turn is part of Central Trust) uses the brand name Debtbusterloans for its consumer loans business. In a similar vein Barclays uses the name Firstplus for its Internet and Television campaigns. One wonders whether the Financial Journalist Martin Lewis who led a campaign criticising Firstplus for using celebrities like Carol Vorderman to promote their loans knew he was actually criticising Barclays. Other interesting names to mention are the masses of trading names used by General Electric. General Electric operates GE Capital Bank that trades under a number of names including GE Finance, GEMoney, First National and Igroup and some of these are umbrellas to other trading names. It is interesting to note that one overall owner of a Financial Group may be directly related to perhaps 50 or so websites and trading names on the Internet.

     

    Maybe the trading names are not only used to attract the various socio economic groups but are also used to distance Companies from the rather emotive Secured Loans market. When a Customer is asked whom they got their Secured Loan off, they would nearly always say the brand name rather than the name of the Company at the top of the pyramid who supplied the actual loan

     

    It is interesting to note that nearly all Brokers aren’t impartial. The Lenders providing the money at the end of the chain offer them volume overrides (bonuses) if they obtain a particular volume of business over a given period. But contrary to this, it is also noteworthy to recognise that given the relatively low number of moneylenders at the end of the chain the affect on the end Customer is minimal. When a Broker says they are processing an application against Hundreds of Loans, what they actually mean is that they are matching the Loan against various configurations of the same three or four loans. For example – with County Court Judgements/without, of a particular age group/of another age group, for a particular value/ for other values.

     

    <b>Secured Loan Packager</b>

     

    Although the term Secured Loan Packager is used very loosely and there is no clear definition, a Packager is simply an organisation who ‘packages’ up a loan application and passes it onto either a Broker or the downstream lender. So in essence the Packager fills out the forms on behalf of the other organisations. In some cases this operates in a sort of outsource relationship between the Broker and the Packager and in other cases the Packager also has their own team of Introducers (see below) who they package up further loan applications for. I guess the reason for this is that seeing as they have the infrastructure in place they can increase their own organisations turnover and, hence, profitability by employing their own Introducer Network.

     

    <b>Secured Loan Introducers</b>

     

    Secured Loan Introducers are employed by Packagers, Brokers and indeed, in some cases the actual lenders to get further business. An Introducer may simply be a local person who gets business by word of mouth, or they could be an organisation (like a Double Glazing company) that passes on a Customer to a particular Broker. In some cases the Introducer companies are reasonably large organisations in their own right and might have a complete network of physical Introducers, a large Broker/Lender panel and a whole host of Internet websites and brand names.

     

    <b>Conclusion</b>

     

    The Secured Loan Market contains a complete myriad of organisations and as the market grows it is certain to become even more puzzling. What is even more confusing to the onlooker is that there is a lot of grey areas in relationships between the businesses within the hierarchy. For example, a broker may do their own packaging or an Introducer may have relationships with many Brokers making them in effect a Broker of Brokers. But the interesting thing is that no matter what level of the hierarchy the end Customer gives their business to they are highly unlikely to be charged any differently – the only things affected within this instance are the individual profits at each level of the pyramid.