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Check cashers, finance companies and others are making
small, short-term, high-rate loans that go by a variety
of names: payday loans, cash advance loans, check advance
loans, post-dated check loans or deferred deposit check
loans.
Usually, a borrower writes a personal check payable to
the lender for the amount he or she wishes to borrow plus
a fee. The company gives the borrower the amount of the
check minus the fee. Fees charged for payday loans are usually
a percentage of the face value of the check or a fee charged
per amount borrowed - say, for every $50 or $100 loaned.
And, if you extend or "roll-over" the loan - say
for another two weeks - you will pay the fees for each extension.
Under the Truth in Lending Act, the cost of payday loans
- like other types of credit - must be disclosed. 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).
A cash advance loan secured by a personal check - such
as a payday loan - is very expensive credit. Let's say you
write a personal check for $115 to borrow $100 for up to
14 days. The check casher or payday lender agrees to hold
the check until your next payday. At that time, depending
on the particular plan, the lender deposits the check, you
redeem the check by paying the $115 in cash, or you roll-over
the check by paying a fee to extend the loan for another
two weeks. In this example, the cost of the initial loan
is a $15 finance charge and 391 percent APR. If you roll-over
the loan three times, the finance charge would climb to
$60 to borrow $100.
The above is an excerpt from the Federal
Trade Commission web site.
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