Lost Income and Now Missing Credit Card Payments: What Should You Do First?

by Joe Mahlow • Updated on Apr. 04, 2026
Experiencing lost income and now missing credit card payments. What should you do first? The first 30 to 60 days after income disruption is where most credit damage begins.
According to the Federal Reserve, many U.S. households cannot cover an unexpected expense without borrowing, which is why missed payments tend to follow quickly after job loss or reduced income. Once an account hits 30 days late, it can be reported, and by 60 to 90 days, it is at risk of charge-off or transfer to collections.
Working with clients in Houston, this is the exact stage where outcomes split. Some take action early by contacting creditors, restructuring payments, or prioritizing accounts strategically. Others wait, thinking they can recover in a few weeks, and end up with multiple late payments, penalty APR increases, and accounts closing or being sold. The difference is not income level. It is timing and strategy.
Call your card issuer before you miss a payment. Hardship programs are never advertised, but they exist at Chase, Amex, Discover, and most major issuers.
The priority is not paying everything at once. It is controlling how the damage spreads. This means knowing which accounts to address first, what to say to creditors, and how to prevent a temporary income loss from turning into long-term credit damage. Here's the exact order of what to do and what happens if you wait.
Job Loss · Missed Credit Card Payments · Hardship Programs · Credit Score Impact · Debt Management
Losing income and missing credit card payments happen to millions of people. The order in which you act in the first 30 days determines whether this is a short setback or a seven-year credit problem. Here is the right sequence.
Updated March 2026 · Sources: Federal Reserve Bank of New York Q4 2024 data, CFPB consumer credit data, myFICO Forums, Reddit r/personalfinance, The Debt Relief Company consumer interviews (February 2026), U.S. News Money (October 2025)
Total U.S. credit card debt hit $1.21 trillion in Q4 2024, the highest on record. The average credit card APR sits above 24% for new accounts. Close to half of all cardholders carry a balance month to month. A job loss that would have been manageable a few years ago can spiral fast at those rates. The good news is that the first phone call you make matters more than almost anything else.
What Happens After a Missed Credit Card Payment — Timeline
A missed payment does not trigger collections the next day. There is a sequence. Knowing it tells you exactly how much time you have at each stage.
The 30-day mark is the critical threshold. A lapse of 29 days is bad but invisible to lenders. A lapse of 30 days becomes a formal derogatory mark. If you have already passed that line on one card, focus on preventing it on the others. Each card is tracked separately.
Credit Card Hardship Programs: What They Are and How to Qualify
Most people do not know these programs exist. The issuers do not advertise them. There is no button on their website that says "hardship program." You have to call and ask directly.
A hardship program is a temporary modification to your account. What you can get varies by issuer and by your situation, but the most common options are:
- Interest rate reduced to between 0% and 9% for the program duration
- Lower minimum payment requirement
- Late fee waived (including any already charged)
- Temporary pause on payments, typically three to six months
- Penalty APR reversal if it has already triggered
Programs run from 3 months to 48 months depending on the issuer and how severe your situation is. The short-term programs usually let you keep using the card. The long-term ones typically suspend your card during enrollment but offer bigger rate reductions.
Who qualifies for a hardship program?
Issuers evaluate each case individually. Job loss is the most commonly accepted reason. But you do not have to be fully unemployed. A reduction in hours, a major medical bill, a divorce, a natural disaster, or a significant cut in income all qualify at most issuers. The standard is whether something changed that makes your current payment schedule genuinely difficult.
Which Credit Card Issuers Offer Hardship Programs?
| Issuer | Program Available? | What You Can Get | How to Reach Them |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chase | Yes (short and long-term) | Rate reduction, lower minimum, fee waiver. Long-term: up to 48 months. | Number on back of card. Federal workers affected by 2025 layoffs: 1-800-254-7713 |
| American Express | Yes (two tiers) | Short-term (12 months): card stays open. Long-term (48 months): card suspended, larger rate cut. | Number on back of card or amex.com/hardship |
| Discover | Yes | Rate reduction, lower minimum, fee waiver. 24/7 customer service line. | 1-800-347-2683 (24/7) |
| Citi | Yes | Rate reduction, payment deferral, fee waiver. Terms vary by account history. | Number on back of card. Ask for "hardship assistance." |
| Bank of America | Yes | Temporary payment reduction or deferral. Balance and history dependent. | Number on back of card or online chat after login. |
| Capital One | Available on request | Case-by-case basis. May offer payment deferral or minimum reduction. | Number on back of card. Ask specifically for "financial hardship team." |
| Wells Fargo | Available on request | "Various plans" during hardship periods. Check online account for messages. | Number on back of card. Check account portal first for online options. |
What to Say When You Call: Hardship Request Script
Go into the call prepared. Know your monthly income right now, what you can realistically pay, and how long you expect the hardship to last. Issuers approve more requests when you can show the situation is temporary and you have a plan.
How Many Missed Payments Before Collections? The Real Numbers
This is the question most people search for after they have already missed one payment. Here is how the actual sequence works.
The first missed payment triggers a late fee and, after 30 days, a derogatory mark on your credit report. The issuer does not immediately sell the debt. Most issuers wait until 120 to 180 days of non-payment before charging off the account and transferring it to a collection agency. That window is your opportunity to resolve the situation before it escalates.
After charge-off, a debt collector takes over. They will call repeatedly. They may report a new collection entry on your credit report in addition to the original charge-off entry. Both entries can stay on your report for seven years from the date of first delinquency.
If collections fail, the collector may sue you. In most states, a credit card lawsuit can be filed within four to six years of your last payment. A judgment gives them additional collection tools, including bank account levies. In Texas and some other states, they cannot garnish wages for consumer debt, but in many states they can.
What to Do When Stopping Credit Card Payments Is Unavoidable
Sometimes hardship programs are not enough. Your income loss is longer-term. The balance is too large. The issuer denies enrollment. What then?
Missed Payments Are Showing on Your Report. Here Is What That Actually Means for Your Score.
A late payment entry, a charge-off, and a collection account are three different things with different credit score impacts. A free 3-bureau audit shows exactly what is on your report, what each entry means, and which ones are disputable even during an active hardship period.
Get My Free Credit Audit → Secure · 2 minutes · No credit card requiredWill Stopping Credit Card Payments Affect Your Credit Score? Yes. Here Is Exactly How.
Payment history makes up 35% of your FICO score. It is the single most influential factor. One missed payment past 30 days can drop your score by 60 to 110 points depending on how high your score was and how clean your history was before.
The higher your score, the more you lose. A person at 780 loses more from a single late payment than someone at 600, because the algorithm treats an unexpected negative event on a strong profile as a bigger risk signal.
After 30 days: the first derogatory mark appears. After 60 days: a second, more severe mark. After charge-off: a separate derogatory entry. After collections: a third entry from the collector. Each one layers on more damage. Three to five months of strong on-time payments can begin to stabilize the score, but the marks remain on the report for seven years.
How to Protect Your Credit Score During Income Loss
You cannot always prevent every late payment. But you can limit the damage with a few specific actions.
Pay the minimums on everything if you can pay anything at all. Minimum payments keep accounts current. They keep score damage off the table. Paying a $35 minimum is far cheaper than absorbing a 90-point score drop and spending years repairing it.
Do not close cards that are still current. Closing a card raises your credit utilization ratio because you are eliminating available credit. A higher ratio lowers your score. Keep cards open and unused rather than closing them during unemployment.
Do not apply for new credit right now. Every application creates a hard inquiry that can drop your score 5 to 10 points. And with income loss on your record, your approval odds and terms will be unfavorable.
Monitor your credit weekly. You can pull all three reports free at AnnualCreditReport.com. Watch for new entries, changed dates, or collection accounts you did not know about. Catching a problem early gives you more options.
People Also Ask About Missing Credit Card Payments After Income Loss
What should I do first if I lost my job and can't pay my credit cards?
Call your card issuers before you miss a payment. Ask specifically about financial hardship programs. These programs reduce your interest rate, lower your minimum payment, or pause payments for a set period. They are not advertised, so you have to ask. Enrolling before a missed payment means the account stays current on your credit report. Simultaneously file for unemployment benefits, which typically replace 40 to 50 percent of your prior income. Then sort your remaining bills by consequence: housing and utilities before credit cards.
How many missed credit card payments before your account goes to collections?
Most credit card issuers charge off an account and transfer it to a collection agency after 120 to 180 days of non-payment, which is roughly 4 to 6 months. Before that, you will face late fees, a penalty APR, and derogatory marks on your credit report at 30, 60, and 90 days. A charge-off and subsequent collection account create two separate negative entries on your credit report, each staying for seven years from the original date of first delinquency.
Will one missed credit card payment hurt my credit score?
Yes, if it goes past 30 days. A payment that is 1 to 29 days late costs you a late fee but does not affect your credit score. Once 30 days pass without payment, the issuer reports the delinquency to the credit bureaus and your score drops. The impact ranges from 60 to 110 points depending on how strong your credit was before the late mark. The mark stays on your report for 7 years, though its effect on your score diminishes over time as you build positive payment history.
Can you negotiate credit card debt after losing your job?
Yes. You have two main paths. Before missing payments, call the issuer directly and ask about hardship programs, which can reduce your rate and minimum temporarily without damaging your credit. After missing payments and after charge-off, debt settlement becomes an option where you negotiate to pay less than the full balance. Debt settlement requires missing payments first, which damages credit significantly, and settled accounts stay on your report for seven years. Nonprofit credit counseling is a middle path: a structured plan that often avoids the credit damage of settlement while still reducing interest rates.
Can credit card companies sue you for missed payments?
Yes, after a charge-off, the debt is usually sold to a collection agency or debt buyer who can file a lawsuit. The statute of limitations varies by state: four years in Texas, six years in New York, and three to six years in most other states. If you receive a court summons, you must respond within the deadline, typically 14 to 30 days. Ignoring a summons results in an automatic default judgment, which gives the collector legal authority to levy bank accounts and, in many states, garnish wages.
Do credit card hardship programs affect your credit score?
The enrollment itself does not directly affect your score. However, two indirect effects are possible. First, some issuers close or freeze your account while you are enrolled, which raises your credit utilization ratio and can lower your score. Second, some issuers add a note to your credit file about hardship enrollment, which is visible to lenders evaluating new credit applications but does not affect your score calculation. Many issuers report the account as "current" while you are enrolled. Ask specifically what they will report before agreeing to any program terms.
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