Understanding whether your debt is secured or unsecured is one of the most important distinctions in personal finance — because it determines what your creditor can do if you cannot pay, which relief programs apply to your situation, and how negotiations are handled. In 2026, with total U.S. household debt at a record $18.8 trillion and credit card balances alone at $1.28 trillion, millions of Americans are navigating both types simultaneously. Here is exactly what each type means and what your options are.
What Is Secured Debt?
Secured debt is any loan or credit obligation backed by collateral — a specific asset the lender has the legal right to seize if you default. The collateral reduces the lender’s risk, which is why secured debt typically carries lower interest rates than unsecured debt.
The most common examples of secured debt:
- Mortgage: Your home is the collateral. If you stop making payments, the lender can foreclose and take the property.
- Auto loan: Your vehicle is the collateral. Default leads to repossession.
- Home equity loan or HELOC: Uses the equity in your home as collateral for a second loan.
- Secured credit card: Backed by a cash deposit equal to the credit limit — used to build or rebuild credit.
The defining feature of secured debt: the creditor can take something tangible from you if you do not pay.
What Is Unsecured Debt?
Unsecured debt has no collateral attached. The lender extends credit based solely on your creditworthiness — your credit score, income, and repayment history. Because there is no asset to seize, lenders charge higher interest rates to compensate for the additional risk.
The most common examples of unsecured debt:
- Credit cards: The largest category of unsecured consumer debt — $1.28 trillion outstanding in Q4 2025 at an average APR of 22.30%.
- Medical bills: No collateral is required to receive medical care, making all resulting bills unsecured.
- Personal loans: Unsecured installment loans from banks, credit unions, or online lenders.
- Private student loans: Unlike federal student loans, many private student loans are unsecured.
- Collections accounts: Once a debt goes to collections, it remains unsecured regardless of the original debt type.
Why This Distinction Matters for Debt Relief
The secured vs unsecured distinction is the single most important factor in determining which debt relief options apply to your situation. Here is how it breaks down:
Secured debt — limited relief options
Secured debt cannot be included in most consumer debt relief programs because the collateral is the lender’s protection. You cannot negotiate away a mortgage lien or auto loan the same way you can negotiate credit card debt. Options for secured debt in financial hardship include:
- Loan modification (for mortgages)
- Forbearance (temporary payment pause)
- Refinancing to a lower rate
- Selling the asset to pay off the loan
- Chapter 13 bankruptcy (restructures secured debt through a court-supervised repayment plan)
Unsecured debt — the most relief options available
Unsecured debt is where United Debt Relief’s five programs operate most effectively. Because there is no collateral for the creditor to seize, they have strong incentive to negotiate — particularly once a debt becomes delinquent and the probability of full collection decreases.
United Debt Relief’s done-for-you Debt Settlement program is specifically designed for unsecured debt — credit cards, medical bills, personal loans, and collections. In-network certified negotiators work creditor-by-creditor to reduce the total balance owed, typically by 40 to 50% before fees. Minimum $10,000 in total unsecured debt. No upfront fees.
For those who qualify for a personal loan at a rate below their current credit card APRs, a Debt Consolidation Loan from our nationwide network of vetted lending partners can replace multiple high-rate unsecured balances with one fixed monthly payment. Qualifying borrowers have accessed rates of 10 to 17% versus the 22%+ average credit card rate.
If unsecured debts are in collections, Debt Validation under the FDCPA can challenge whether those accounts are even legally collectible — potentially achieving trade line deletion at no cost beyond the validation process itself.
Frequently Asked Questions — Secured vs Unsecured Debt
Q: Can I include my mortgage in a debt settlement program?
No. Mortgages are secured debt and are not eligible for United Debt Relief’s Debt Settlement program. However, if unsecured debt is the root cause of your inability to keep up with mortgage payments, addressing that unsecured debt through settlement or consolidation can restore the cash flow needed to stay current on your mortgage.
Q: What happens to unsecured debt if I stop paying?
Unlike secured debt, creditors cannot immediately seize assets. However, the account becomes delinquent, is charged off, and is typically sold to a collection agency. The collection agency may pursue legal action and eventually obtain a judgment — which can lead to wage garnishment in many states. Acting before accounts reach judgment stage gives you significantly more negotiating options.
Q: Is medical debt treated differently from credit card debt?
Both are unsecured, but medical debt has specific characteristics. As of 2023, major credit bureaus removed medical debt under $500 from credit reports. However, medical debt over $500 that goes to collections remains reportable. Medical providers are often more willing to negotiate directly than credit card companies — but United Debt Relief’s settlement program can handle both simultaneously.
Carrying unsecured debt you can’t manage? Call United Debt Relief at 1 (888) 802-2092. Free consultation — five programs available. All 50 states. No upfront fees.