My Debt Marketplace
Debt Settlement Marketplace

Getting out of debt has never been so easy.

My Debt Marketplace puts you back in control. Submit your information once and compare multiple debt-relief offers in one place, without endless phone calls or repeated credit checks. Review lower payments, better terms, and tailored solutions, then choose the fastest, smartest path out of debt with confidence.

Privacy securedAdvertiser disclosuresWon't affect your credit to check

One form. Offers from every company.

We compare programs from the debt-relief providers below, you fill out one short questionnaire, and we line up offers from the ones that actually match your situation.

  • CuraDebt logo
  • United Debt Settlement logo
  • National Debt Relief logo
  • Solid Ground Financial logo
  • American Debt Relief logo
  • Freedom Debt Relief logo

Logos are property of their respective owners. Inclusion does not imply an active partnership in every case.

4.7 / 5
Average partner rating
No credit pull
Won't affect your credit
5 vetted companies
Partner network
TLS + at rest
Your data is encrypted

How My Debt Marketplace works

One short form. Multiple companies. You stay in control of who can contact you.

  1. Step 1

    Tell us about your debt

    About 3 minutes. We ask the same things every debt-relief company asks, only you fill it out once.

  2. Step 2

    Compare real offers

    We line up A+ / top-rated companies side-by-side, ranked by estimated savings, monthly payment, and timeframe.

  3. Step 3

    You choose your terms

    Pick the program length that fits your budget, 24, 36, or 48 months, and watch the pricing update in real time.

  4. Step 4

    You choose who calls

    Pick up to 3 companies. Only those you select see your contact info. No surprise sales calls.

Frequently asked

No. We don't pull your credit when you fill out our intake. The companies you ultimately enroll with may pull credit later, depending on the program. Debt settlement programs themselves do impact credit during enrollment because accounts must typically become delinquent before creditors will negotiate.