Getting help should not feel like a maze. Our process is simple: a 60-second options check with no hard credit pull, a personalized summary of the paths that actually fit, and clear, step-by-step guidance once you choose. Here is exactly what happens at each stage.
Everything begins with a short set of questions — the same options check you will find on our homepage. It takes about a minute and asks only what is needed to point you toward paths that fit: roughly how much you owe on your cards, whether you are current or have fallen behind, a rough sense of your credit range, and the state you live in. There is no hard credit check to preview your options, and you do not need to share a Social Security number or bank account just to see what is available.
The reason we lead with a few questions instead of a sales pitch is simple: the right next move for someone who is current on their cards is different from the right move for someone three months behind. Answering honestly is what lets the summary in Step 2 be useful rather than generic. When you are ready, you can start the 60-second check and pick up right here.
Once your answers are in, we assemble a plain-language summary of the covered paths that make sense for your situation. Gateway Debt Help focuses on the routes we can genuinely guide you through — credit card hardship relief, credit counseling, and credit rebuilding — and your summary explains, in ordinary words, how each one would work for you and what to expect.
Nothing is decided for you at this stage. The summary is a map, not a contract: it lays out the trade-offs so you can weigh a faster route against a gentler one, or a short-term fix against a longer plan. A specialist can walk through it with you by phone if you would rather talk it out, and state-specific rules that affect your choices are flagged where they apply. You stay in control of what happens next.
When you pick a direction, the guidance gets specific. Below, we break down exactly how each of our three covered paths proceeds once you choose it — the concrete steps, roughly how long they take, and what you will be asked to do along the way. Many people combine paths over time: easing the immediate pressure on their cards first, then building lasting habits and a stronger credit profile afterward.
There is no obligation to continue, and no upfront debt-relief fee to see where a path leads. If a route stops making sense for you, you can change course — the point is momentum, not lock-in.
Hardship relief works directly with your existing card issuers rather than replacing them. If this is the path you choose, here is the typical sequence:
This path is often the fastest first step because it uses tools your issuers already have. You can read the full walkthrough on our credit card hardship relief page.
Credit counseling brings a certified counselor into the picture to look at your whole budget, not just one card. When you choose this route, it generally unfolds like this:
Counseling suits people who are current or only slightly behind and want structure and lower interest without walking away from their accounts. See the detail on our credit counseling page.
Rebuilding is the long game — turning a stabilized situation into a stronger credit profile and habits that hold. Our guidance follows a realistic first-year arc:
The full month-by-month roadmap lives on our credit rebuild page, including a first-year checklist you can follow.
You do not need much to begin, and you never need sensitive information just to see your options. Having a rough sense of these makes Step 1 faster and Step 2 sharper:
That is it. When you are ready, start the 60-second check and the rest of the process follows the steps above.
No. The 60-second check does not run a hard credit inquiry to preview your options. You answer a few questions and receive a summary of the paths that may fit; nothing about that step pulls your credit or dents your score.
The initial check takes about a minute, and your options summary is ready right after. How long the path you choose takes varies: hardship relief can move quickly because it uses tools your issuers already offer, while counseling plans and credit rebuilding unfold over months by design.
No. Reviewing your options carries no obligation and no upfront debt-relief fee. You decide whether to move forward, and you can change direction if a path stops making sense for you.
Often, yes. Many people ease the immediate pressure on their cards first, then focus on rebuilding their credit profile and habits afterward. Your options summary notes where paths naturally lead into one another.
To see options, just approximate card balances, your payment status, a rough credit range, and your state. No Social Security number or bank account is required at that stage. You can review the details on our FAQ page.
It takes about a minute, there is no hard credit check to preview options, and there is no obligation. Secure & confidential.