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You are here: Home / News / MyPR / What to Do When Your Debt Gets Out of Hand

What to Do When Your Debt Gets Out of Hand

15 May 2026 by Guest

Most people don’t plan to end up in financial trouble. It starts small?—?a store card here, a personal loan there, maybe a credit card that was only meant for emergencies. Then one month, the payments start overlapping. The salary comes in and it’s gone before the weekend. Bills pile up. Calls from creditors start coming …

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Most people don’t plan to end up in financial trouble. It starts small?—?a store card here, a personal loan there, maybe a credit card that was only meant for emergencies. Then one month, the payments start overlapping. The salary comes in and it’s gone before the weekend. Bills pile up. Calls from creditors start coming in. It’s a situation thousands of South Africans find themselves in, and it can feel like there’s no way out.

But there is. And it doesn’t involve running away from the problem or ignoring phone calls.

How Debt Spirals Out of Control

Debt doesn’t usually happen overnight. It builds up slowly. A car breaks down, so a loan covers the repair. A medical bill comes in that wasn’t expected. The kids need school fees. Each expense on its own seems manageable, but together they create a monthly payment that’s bigger than what’s coming in.

Interest is the real killer. When minimum payments barely cover the interest charges, the actual balance hardly moves. It can take years?—?sometimes decades?—?to pay off a credit card if only the minimum is paid each month. And during that time, the total amount paid back can be double or triple the original amount borrowed.

Then there’s the emotional side. Money stress affects sleep, relationships, and mental health. People avoid opening letters. They stop answering calls from numbers they don’t recognise. They feel ashamed, even though financial difficulty is far more common than most people realise.

What Options Are on the Table

When someone is struggling with multiple debts, there are a few routes worth looking at. Each one works differently, and the right choice depends on the person’s specific situation.

Paying off debts one at a time is the simplest approach. Some people tackle the smallest balance first to get quick wins, while others go after the one with the highest interest rate to save money long-term. This works well when the total debt is still manageable and the person has enough income to cover basic living costs after making payments.

Debt Consolidation is another option. This means taking out a single loan to pay off all the smaller debts, leaving just one monthly payment instead of five or six. The idea is that one payment is easier to manage, and the interest rate on the new loan might be lower than what was being charged across the different accounts. It’s not a magic fix?—?the debt still exists?—?but it can make the repayment process simpler and more predictable.

Debt Counselling is a formal process set up under South African law through the National Credit Act. A registered debt counsellor looks at all of a person’s income, expenses, and debts, and then works with the creditors to come up with a new repayment plan. The monthly payments are usually reduced, and the interest rates are often lowered too. During this process, creditors are not allowed to take legal action against the person, which gives some breathing room.

How the Formal Process Works

When someone applies for Debt Review, a debt counsellor assesses their full financial picture. Every cent coming in and every rand going out gets looked at. The counsellor then determines whether the person is over-indebted?—?meaning they genuinely don’t earn enough to cover all their debt payments and still afford basic needs like food, transport, and housing.

If the person qualifies, the counsellor contacts all the creditors and negotiates new terms. This might mean lower monthly instalments, reduced interest rates, or extended payment periods. Once everyone agrees, a new repayment plan is put in place. The person makes a single monthly payment to a registered payment distribution agency, which then splits the money between the creditors according to the agreed plan.

One thing to know is that during this process, the person is not allowed to take on any new credit. That sounds restrictive, but it’s actually part of what makes it work. It stops the situation from getting worse while the existing debts are being sorted out.

Picking the Right Help

Not all service providers are the same, and it pays to do some homework before signing up with anyone. Registered Debt Review Companies should be registered with the National Credit Regulator (NCR). This registration means they’ve met certain standards and are legally allowed to operate. Anyone offering debt help without NCR registration should be avoided.

Ask questions before committing. How long have they been operating? What fees do they charge? Are those fees regulated? A legitimate provider will be upfront about costs and won’t pressure anyone into signing anything on the spot.

It’s also worth talking to people who’ve been through the process. Word of mouth still matters. If a friend or family member had a good experience with a particular service, that carries weight. If they had a bad one, that’s just as useful to know.

Common Worries People Have

“Will it affect my credit score?” Yes, being under debt review does appear on a person’s credit record. But here’s the thing?—?if someone is already missing payments, their credit score is taking hits anyway. Going through a structured process and coming out the other side debt-free actually puts a person in a better position long-term than struggling along and defaulting on payments.

“How long does it take?” It depends on how much debt there is. Some people finish in three to four years. Others take longer. It’s not a quick fix, but it is a structured path towards being debt-free, which is better than making minimum payments for the next twenty years.

“Can my car or house be taken away?” During the formal process, creditors are legally prevented from repossessing assets. That protection is one of the biggest reasons people choose this route. Without it, a creditor could get a court order and take a vehicle or property. Under the process, that action is paused.

“What happens when it’s done?” Once all the debts are paid off, a clearance certificate is issued. This removes the flag from the person’s credit record, and they’re back to having a clean slate. They can apply for credit again, though many people find they’re more careful with borrowing after going through the experience.

Small Steps That Help Right Now

While working through a formal process, or even before starting one, there are a few things that can make the day-to-day easier.

Write down every expense for a month. Not a rough guess?—?actual numbers. Most people are surprised by how much goes to small purchases that add up. That R30 coffee every morning is R900 a month.

Talk to creditors early. If a payment is going to be late, calling the creditor before the due date is always better than going silent. Many will offer short-term arrangements if they know the person is trying.

Stop using credit cards. This sounds obvious, but it’s harder in practice. Leave the card at home. Remove it from saved payment methods on apps and websites. If it’s not easy to use, it won’t get used.

Get help sooner rather than later. The longer debt goes unmanaged, the harder it gets to fix. Interest keeps compounding, fees keep adding up, and the stress keeps building. Reaching out when the problem is still manageable is much easier than waiting until it’s a full-blown crisis.

Moving Forward

Financial trouble doesn’t mean failure. It means life got complicated, which happens to a lot of people. The difference between staying stuck and getting out comes down to taking action?—?whether that’s budgeting more carefully, consolidating debts, or going through a formal process with professional help.

The tools and legal protections exist for a reason. They’re there for people who need them. Using them isn’t a sign of weakness. It’s a practical decision that puts a person back on solid ground.

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