![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
| · Portal |
Help
Search
Members
Calendar
|
| Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register ) | Resend Validation Email |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
| ZaboloelBlya |
|
|
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 1 Member No.: 58 Joined: 13-June 08 |
Payday loan (also called a paycheck advance or payday advance) is a small, short-term loan that is intended to cover a borrower's expenses until his or her next payday. Typical loans are between $100 and $500 and are due in two weeks, with interest rates of up to 400% APR. On a two-week loan, fees average $15 for each $100 lent.[1] The loans are also sometimes referred to as cash advances, though that term can also refer to cash provided against a prearranged line of credit such as a credit card.
No Teletrack Payday Loan Underwood Indiana Ohio Payday Loans Laws 1000 No Fax Payday Loan New Jersey Payday Loans Low Fee Payday Loan Online Sardis Ohio Payday Loan Online Trout Dale Virginia Keywords Payday Loan 49 Payday Loan Santa Ana 71 248 United Cash Payday Loan 358 Default On Payday Loan Payday Loan Best Rate Sask Payday Loan Payday Loan Program 4 Huntingburg Payday Loan 6 Easy Faxless Loan Payday 20 6 Fax Hassle Payday Loan 8 Consolidate Payday Loan Payday Advance Loan Tazewell Tennessee Payday Loan Online Personal Loans Paydayloanpages Fax Line Loan No Payday Fax Information Loan Payday No Faxing Payday Advances 4 Hazlet Payday Loan 6 Kansas City Payday Advance Payday Advance Cheque Cashing Payday Loans Payday Preferred Payday Loan Simplepaydayloan Personal Loan Payday Loans Bill 10 Payday Loan In Alaska 14 No Hank Statement Payday Loan Though payday lending is primarily regulated at the state level, the United States Congress passed a law in October 2006 becoming effective on Oct. 1, 2007 that caps lending to military personnel at 36% APR as defined by the Secretary of Defense.[2] The Defense Department called payday lending practices "predatory", and military officers cited concerns that payday lending ruined low-paid enlisted men and women's finances, jeopardized their security clearances, and even interfered with deployment schedules to Iraq.[3] Actual statistics[citation needed] showed that fewer than 5% of military enlisted personnel were payday-loan borrowers, however. Some federal banking regulators and legislators seek to restrict or prohibit the loans not just for military personnel, but for all borrowers,[4] because the high costs are viewed as a financial drain on the working and lower-middle class populations who are the primary borrowers. |
![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]()