Mycashnow /Tx statues
Date: Thu, 06/29/2006 - 07:40
Mycashnow /Tx statues
But I dont understand the usuary laws here to know if they are charging me to much as well or how to figure that
Do you have any paperwork from the loan place? You can try and
Do you have any paperwork from the loan place? You can try and compare it to this:
Loan Terms:
Maximum Loan Amount:
Loan Term: 7-31 days
Maximum Finance Rate and Fees: $10 per loan + 48% annual interest
Finance Charge for 14-day $100 loan: $12
apr for 14-day $100 loan: 309%
What does it mean 309%? So per say on a 300 Dollar loan the
What does it mean 309%?
So per say on a 300 Dollar loan the most they should charge me is ? and on a 610 loan the most they can charge me is?
Like I said they are telling the the balance to pay it in full is over 900 and I have already paid almost 200 to this one loan alone
Here, this is actually a little better: The interest permitte
Here, this is actually a little better:
The interest permitted on cash advances under $2500 is $18 for each $100 loaned per year (Texas Finance Code 342.200). As an alternate interest charge provision, the Texas Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner has instituted a $10 upfront fee, plus $4 per $100 loaned per month on short-term loans (equal to 48% apr) (Texas Finance Code 342.252 (3)). Additionally, all such loans that rollover more than two times must be converted to a declining balance loan with a set repayment schedule.
What was the original loan amount, and what is their "finance charge" per pay period for their so called "renewal"? For example, I had a 300 pdayday loan, and they charged me $75 per pay check for 4 paychecks just to roll the loan over to the next pay period and not contribute anything towards paying off the actual loan. Then, on the 5th paycheck, a minuscule amount of that $75 went towards the principle of the loan. So, they were in excess of TX's allowed interest limits, and they violated the statute about how many times a loan can be "rolled over" before money is actually paid toward the principle. Let me know if that helps or if I can try to explain it better. :)