Yes. Why should your citizenship matter? If you did something that harmed the credit card company, they can sue you.
A credit card company will add non payment onto the outstanding balance and that in turn wil incur the agreed interest charges of your credit card company. Also, if you continue to miss payments even though you are staying abroad, this will eventually affect your credit rating, making it very difficult to get future credit.
Yes, I'm pretty sure you will need a Visa though. (Not Visa credit card)
A motorcycle that was paid for on a credit card can not be repossessed considering the credit card company paid the dealer. You must pay the card company back though or they can take you to court.
Not extraterrestrial ones. Though an alien is also someone living in a country that was not born there and is not a naturalised citizen.
The company Fast Bad Credit Loans is located in London, England. They offer loans to those with bad credit when one needs a loan in a hurry. The interest rates are very high though.
I believe it is the name of the person who created the company, I am not sure though...
Nintendo is the company behind it, though the credit for the original design lays with Gunpei Yokoi.
They usually can't cancel a policy due to credit. The rates can go WAY up though!
If you live in a different country and you marry a US citizen that is in your country and move to where your spouse came from you can move there to. My mom is from another country my friends parents is from England and they live in California with me not in my house though. yes if you didnt understand what I meant.
There are several companies that offer car loans to people with bad credit including Auto Credit Express and Cars Direct. Each company caters to different lifestyles and credit histories, so it is best for a person to choose the company that will benefit them the most.
It is possible to receive a free credit check report once a year from each of the three credit bureaus. It can be be found directly though the company's website like Experia.
Yes. Even though the chargeoff line item should come off of the credit report in seven years, the credit card company may attempt to collect their debt for as long as they wish (assuming no fair credit collection laws are broken in the process).