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Recently a close relative revealed to me that she has run up $40,000 in credit card debt over the last few years, which she can no longer manage because the interest payments are eating up all of her disposable income, making it impossible to pay down the debt. Since I'm in a good financial situation, I offered to help her deal with this problem; now I just have to figure out what is the best way to do it.

I personally have no financial problems -- my only outstanding debt is for a mortgage on my condo, and it is ~90% paid off, and my income from my job is well above what I need to pay my own expenses.

Therefore, I'm tempted to take out a HELOC (or a similar loan against the equity of my condo) in order to pay off the credit card debts ASAP, so as to "stop the bleeding" of high interest rates and help her get back to a stable situation. (She could then pay me back at her leisure, or if not, I could eat the expense and call it good karma) However, I've heard it suggested that this is an unnecessary risk/expense for me to take, and that there are better (and/or cheaper) ways to address this situation.

The other extreme would be to do nothing except suggest that she declare bankruptcy, but I think that having to go through a bankruptcy would be very stressful to her and so I'd like to avoid that if possible.

A compromise solution might be to help her pay off part of the debt and leave the rest to pay off herself, although that seems sub-optimal since the remaining debt might just balloon up again, leaving the problem unresolved despite the money I put into solving it. (And presumably any debt left on credit cards would carry a higher interest rate than a HELOC/home-loan would)

She's in her seventies, retired, and living on a fixed retirement income. Can anyone who has encountered a similar situation provide some advice on a wise way to proceed here, and or point out any pitfalls to avoid?

Qsigma
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Jeremy
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    How upset would you be if it was never paid back? How upset would you be if in addition to not getting paid back she immediately began racking up new debt? – Hart CO Jun 18 '18 at 19:03
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    I wouldn't be too upset about not getting paid back; OTOH I would be upset if she began racking up new debt again. – Jeremy Jun 18 '18 at 19:18
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    Does she own a home or rent? – Hart CO Jun 18 '18 at 19:31
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    do you know how specifically she racked up that much debt? will she fall into the same pattern of living again? – depperm Jun 18 '18 at 19:34
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    She rents -- she racked up the debt because her rent takes up most of her income, leaving her with little left to cover other expenses. She's planning to move to a cheaper location as soon as her lease expires (which isn't for another 6 months, however) (As for whether she'll fall back into the same pattern again, that's the big question -- I think the only way to guarantee that is to make sure she doesn't have access to more than a small amount of credit debt) – Jeremy Jun 18 '18 at 20:04
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    So you'd be getting rid of someone else's unsecured debt by taking on your own secured debt... this seems like a bad idea. Are you asking because you expect to be a beneficiary of her estate once she's gone and want to maximize your inheritance, or are you just trying to help her out? – BradDaBug Jun 18 '18 at 21:00
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    @BradDaBug the latter – Jeremy Jun 18 '18 at 21:07
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    @Jeremy please update your question with the information in the comments – GS - Apologise to Monica Jun 20 '18 at 11:45
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    something I'm not seeing in the answers: If she is 70, there are a lot of laws in place to protect her. You should talk to a lawyer and see if the credit card company can actually make her pay, and find out what will happen to the debt after she dies. Right now, i'd bet that her debt is a write-off. – James Jun 20 '18 at 12:48
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    What are these interests? Just yesterday I was reading about a case in Italy where the bank was found guilty of usury... – Bakuriu Jun 21 '18 at 04:06
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    Does she want help? Did she ask for it? I see several answers suggesting you to do X or Y, but if there is no request your/her chances of success are small. –  Jun 21 '18 at 09:26
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    She's in her seventies It has to be asked: does she still make sound decisions or do you have indications that she may not be as sharp as she used to be (which could be a reason for the debt)? –  Jun 21 '18 at 09:28
  • Short answer: no. Long answer: noooooooo (joking) – Lightness Races in Orbit Jun 26 '18 at 13:00
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  • flag She rents -- she racked up the debt because her rent takes up most of her income, leaving her with little left to cover other expenses.* Why didn't she realize that that would happen? Did she rent without calculating whether she could afford it or not, or did she experience a sudden and unexpected drop in income?

    – EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine Jun 26 '18 at 15:19
  • @JanDoggen raises an important point. Even mild dementia can lead to really bad financial decisions, and there are entire industries whose primary business model is preying on elderly people with diminished faculties (Publisher's Clearing House is one example. It's literally their entire business model to charge absurd prices and shipping fees for crappy imported products.) – barbecue Jun 26 '18 at 18:33
  • If you bail her out and then she racks up more debt, she will then feel that it is your obligation to bail her out the next time since you bailed her out the first time. This falls under the umbrella of no good deed goes unpunished. – Itsme2003 Jun 26 '18 at 21:34