One of the first things people want to know when they start looking into debt settlement is whether their specific debt qualifies. It’s a smart question — not all debt is equal, and not every balance can be settled the same way.
Here’s a clear breakdown of what typically qualifies, what doesn’t, and why it matters for your strategy.
Debt that can typically be settled
Credit card debt
This is the most common type of debt enrolled in settlement programs. Unsecured, often at high interest rates, and credit card issuers have well-established negotiation processes. Most credit card balances over $5,000 are strong candidates for settlement.
Personal loans (unsecured)
Unsecured personal loans — meaning there’s no collateral attached — are generally eligible for settlement. Once the lender recognizes the account is seriously delinquent, they often prefer to recover a percentage through settlement rather than pursue costly collection efforts.
Medical debt
Medical bills are one of the most negotiable forms of debt in existence. Hospitals and medical providers typically settle for a significant percentage below the original balance, and many have hardship programs specifically designed to resolve unpaid balances.
Private student loans
Private student loans — those issued by banks and private lenders, not the federal government — can sometimes be settled, particularly when a borrower is in significant hardship and the loan is severely delinquent. Each lender has different policies.
Department store and retail credit accounts
These unsecured revolving accounts generally follow the same settlement path as major credit cards.
Debt that typically cannot be settled through standard programs
Federal student loans
Federal student loans are backed by the U.S. government and are subject to their own set of rules. Settlement is rare, and the government has far more powerful collection tools than private creditors — including wage garnishment without a court judgment. If federal student loan debt is your primary challenge, different solutions apply.
Secured debt — mortgages and auto loans
Secured debts are tied to physical assets. If you stop paying a mortgage, the lender forecloses. If you stop paying a car loan, the lender repossesses. Settlement in the traditional sense doesn’t apply here — though loan modifications and other negotiations may be available.
Tax debt
IRS debt and state tax debts have their own resolution programs, including offers in compromise. A tax professional handles these, not a debt settlement program.
Child support and alimony
Court-ordered obligations cannot be settled or discharged through standard debt settlement.
The sweet spot for debt settlement
The ideal candidate for debt settlement has $10,000 or more in unsecured debt — credit cards, personal loans, medical bills — that they are genuinely struggling to repay.
If that description fits you, there’s a real path to resolving that debt for significantly less than the full balance — without bankruptcy, without a new loan, and without 31 years of minimum payments.
One more thing worth knowing
When a creditor settles a debt for less than you owe, the forgiven amount can be reported to the IRS as income on a Form 1099-C. This is a real consideration. However, if you qualify as insolvent at the time of settlement — meaning your total liabilities exceeded your total assets — you may be able to exclude that amount from taxable income using IRS Form 982. A tax professional can walk you through this based on your specific situation.
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