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Credit Card Forgiveness in New Hampshire [2026]: Settlement, Licensing, 1099-C, NH Rules

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for New Hampshire residents.

What "Credit Card Forgiveness" Means in New Hampshire

"Credit card forgiveness" is a marketing term, not a legal one. In practice it refers to four distinct paths, each with different New Hampshire rules:

  1. Direct settlement with issuer. You negotiate a reduced lump-sum or extended-payment settlement yourself.
  2. Debt settlement company. A for-profit firm negotiates on your behalf for a fee. Regulated under New Hampshire's debt-adjuster / CROA analog.
  3. Nonprofit credit counseling (DMP). 100% repayment at lower interest via a Debt Management Plan; not forgiveness, but often mislabeled that way.
  4. Bankruptcy discharge. 11 U.S.C. 727 (Ch 7) or 1328 (Ch 13). The legally complete form of "forgiveness."

New Hampshire Debt-Adjuster / CROA Analog Licensing

New Hampshire regulates for-profit debt settlement and credit-services organizations under:

RSA 399-D Debt Adjustment Services.

Before signing with any New Hampshire debt settlement firm:

  • Verify licensing (where required) through the New Hampshire banking department or AG.
  • Confirm no advance fees - the federal Telemarketing Sales Rule (16 CFR 310.4) bars advance-fee debt relief sold by phone; many state statutes bar it generally.
  • Ask for total cost as a percentage of enrolled debt (typically 15-25%) and read the timeline.
  • Know that your accounts go delinquent during negotiation; expect collection calls, FDCPA-covered, and potential lawsuits during the 24-48 month settlement window.

Settlement Economics in New Hampshire

StageTypical Settlement %New Hampshire Posture
Current (not yet delinquent)Rare; issuers rarely settle current accountsConsider hardship program instead
30-90 days late70-90% of balanceSettlement usually premature
Post charge-off (6+ months, pre-suit)40-60%Prime settlement window
With debt buyer (Midland, LVNV, Portfolio Recovery)20-40%JDBs bought for 3-5 cents; settle low
Post-New Hampshire-lawsuit, pre-judgment40-60%Litigation leverage matters
Post-New Hampshire-judgment50-70%Execution risk drives urgency

The 1099-C Trap for New Hampshire Settlers

Every $600+ of forgiveness triggers IRS Form 1099-C (26 U.S.C. 6050P). That cancelled debt is ordinary income unless excluded under IRC 108.

New Hampshire state tax posture: No wage income tax (interest/div only, CC COD not taxed)

Example: $15,000 forgiven from a $30,000 settlement at a 22% federal bracket = $3,300 in potential federal tax alone, before New Hampshire state tax. Insolvency exclusion (IRC 108(a)(1)(B)) often covers the hit for lower-income/asset households; Title 11 (bankruptcy) exclusion always applies.

See New Hampshire 1099-C treatment for the full walk-through.

New Hampshire Collection Statute Overlay During Settlement

While you are delinquent (the settlement pre-requisite), federal FDCPA + New Hampshire state collection law apply:

RSA 358-C Unfair, Deceptive or Unreasonable Collection Practices; RSA 358-A CPA.

358-C is NH's standalone mini-FDCPA covering original creditors.

Log every collection contact during settlement. Violations stack. A New Hampshire collection suit filed while you are negotiating does not stop settlement - it often accelerates it at a better price.

When Settlement Beats Bankruptcy in New Hampshire

  • Total unsecured debt below roughly $20,000 (settlement cost may be lower than BK legal fees).
  • You have reliable income and can build a settlement fund.
  • You have no non-exempt assets you would lose in New Hampshire Ch 7.
  • You are sure all debt is dischargeable-avoidable through negotiation (no contested claims, no recent cash advances).

When Bankruptcy Beats Settlement in New Hampshire

  • Total unsecured debt above $30,000-50,000.
  • Income instability - settlement requires consistent monthly deposit into settlement fund.
  • One or more creditors have sued or are about to.
  • You have non-credit-card debt (medical, judgments, small deficiency) bundled in.
  • Insolvency-exclusion math does not cover the 1099-C hit.
  • You are heading for foreclosure or repossession (automatic stay needed).