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Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

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  • Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

    It looks like you may have reached a turning point in the road. Whether it's for an auto loan, a personal loan, or department store credit, you may not be able to qualify by your own merits. This is when the cosigner comes into play. The best place to look for a consigner is within the family, or either among friends. You'll want to trust them just as much as they will want to trust you.

    If this individual is backing your loan, they will be privy to the same credit checks as you would be if this were your loan all by itself. Their creditworthiness is based on income, homeownership, credit history, and job security. If you default on any payments, the consigner will have to pick up the tag. That's why it's good to make sure that you have all of your ducks lined up in a row before you put the consigner's financial credit rating on the line.

    Say what you mean and mean what you say!

    To the cosigner, you are saying that you plan to honor the credit contract to the letter they have consigned for. Don't try to take on too much new credit at first. Take the time to really look at your spending habits. If you have had trouble in the recent past keeping up with your finances, this may not be the best time to put someone else in the cross hairs.

    Special thanks for this resource: On Co-Signing

  • #2
    Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

    Co-signing is a great way to kill a friendship if you can't make the payments for whatever reason. How many marriages end over financial problems, so what makes most people think a friendship can handle a default on the loan by the borrower when the co-signer is stuck with the debt and the credit hit.

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    • #3
      Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

      I say stay far, far away from co-signing. The only situation I can see this working is for a parent to co-sign for a child just starting out and needing to start their own credit. My personal two cents is never co-sign for another adult. It's a risky situation and you'd best be able to cover that loan if you ever do! There is a reason they need a co-signer!

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      • #4
        Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You


        I will not ask for someone to co-sign for me nor will I co-sign for someone else.

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        • #5
          Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

          I think that in some rare, rare circumstance I might co-sign for a loan for another adult. It would have to be for a loan that was going to make a crucial differnce in their life, and they would have to be somebody in whom I had complete faith that they could go out tomorrow and get a second job and that they would do so rather than let the loan lapse back to me.

          Even for my children it would only be in such a rare circumstance that I would co-sign.

          I expect that never in my life will such rare circumstances occur, but I am not completely opposed to the possibility.

          I do make personal loans and I will help someone out with an outright gift. But I'm not up for helping an unproven, or irresponsible, or otherwise risky person dig themselves and myself into a pit. Forget it.
          "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

          "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

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          • #6
            Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

            I co signed once, for someone in my family. It was very difficult to get them to make the payments. (it was on a car) When they divorced, I wound up having to make the rest of the payments. (Thank goodness it was only a few payments) I would never co sign for anyone again, except, of course, my husband.

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            • #7
              Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

              I rather make personal loans with written agreements than co-sign. co-sign can affect my credit and bill collectors if something were to happened and were not communicated well to me.

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              • #8
                Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                Ready to ask? My folks did co-sign on one car for me to get me started. They both worked, we lived in the sticks, and in order for me to work I had to have a car as there was no one to give me a ride. But I would NEVER ask anyone to do such a thing. HORRORS!!!

                I cannot imagine anyone else having that 'emotional' power over me anyway - giving them the right to inquire into my financial life - 'have you made your payment this month yet?' kinda dealy-who. NEVER, NO WAY, NO HOW!!!

                uHHHH...I think I feel rather strongly about this.

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                • #9
                  Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                  Well I never needed a cosigner for anything in my life I always worked & made my own way I have cosigned one time in my life & that was for dh's truck loan & NO WAY would I do it again I just got tired of hiim whining about his used vechiles!!!!

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                  • #10
                    Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                    my father cosigned a car loan for me....... it was the only way that I wouldnt get taken to the cleaners (I was 19).

                    I was not that smart about $$$ at that time, but he jumped down my throat about those car payments. I paid off the car early.

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                    • #11
                      Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                      Co sign is only for geometry problems!

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                      • #12
                        Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                        We also are opposed to co-signing for someone else. The only way I could think of it happening would be for one of our children if it was an extreme need. And even then we would probably just do a gift rather than co-sign.

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                        • #13
                          Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                          I have never had anyone co sign for me either. But sometimes, it is the only way your child can get his/her own first car. I paid cash for my first car, but it was almost 10 years old.

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                          • #14
                            Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                            Well, I might for a child but Iwould have to review the circumstances thoroughly!

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                            • #15
                              Re: Are You Really Ready To Ask Someone To Co-sign For You

                              I made sure the payments were made to me, then I made the payments so they were never late. I did not want my credit rating to go down.

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