
A Turning Point for Debt Counselling? DCASA Meets with the Newly Appointed NCR CEO
June 26, 2026Written by Nadia De Weerdt NCRDC3360
2 July 2026
Why a Clearance Certificate Verifies Every Credit Agreement Individually
“But I only had one creditor under debt review.”
It’s a phrase I hear surprisingly often.
Unfortunately, it’s also one of the biggest misconceptions about debt review clearance. Especially when it comes to a Transferred file. If you stay with your original Debt Counsellor, they should have most of the information already. They would, however, still need to cross every T and dot every I.
The One Creditor Myth is surprisingly common whether entering, exiting, transferring during Debt Review.
The confusion usually comes from how we speak about debt.
We naturally say things like:
“I owe ABSA.” or “I only had Standard Bank.”
From a legal and administrative perspective, however, that’s not what matters.
What matters is every individual credit agreement that formed part of your debt review.
And that distinction makes all the difference.
A Creditor Is Not an Account
Think of a creditor as the company while the account is the legal agreement.
For example:
ABSA
- Home Loan
- Vehicle Finance
- Credit Card
- Personal Loan
Most consumers would describe that as:
“One creditor.”
In reality, it represents four separate credit agreements, each with its own:
- Account number
- Settlement history
- Payment history
- Balance
- Paid-up or prescribed status
- Supporting documentation
Each agreement must be individually verified before it can lawfully form part of a Clearance Certificate.
It Gets More Complicated
Now imagine that same personal loan was later handed over to a collections company.
Or the credit card was ceded to another institution.
Or one account prescribed while another was settled.
Suddenly the file no longer looks like this:
ABSA
Instead, it looks more like:
- ABSA Home Loan
- ABSA Vehicle Finance
- ABSA Credit Card
- ABC Collections (formerly ABSA Personal Loan with additional references)
To the consumer, it still feels like “one bank.”
To Debt Counsellors, those are now multiple agreements requiring verification, often involving multiple organisations.
Why Debt Counsellors Ask For So Many Documents
One of the most common questions we receive is:
“Why do you need my PDA statement, court order, proposal, paid-up letters and credit report? Surely you can just see who my creditors were?”
Unfortunately, no single document tells the whole story.
A PDA statement may show one version of events.
A Court Order may list the original agreements.
A form 17.1, form17.2 or proposal may include accounts later withdrawn or terminated. Which means another layer of the investigation process to include the correct and fully eligible debt review accounts must be constructed.
The operational reality means carefully checking which agreements received a form 17.2 and a proposal and were paid as part of the debt review arrangement.
A credit bureau may only display accounts that still remain active.
Paid-up letters prove settlement.
Sometimes each document fills in a different piece of the puzzle.
Only when those pieces are combined can we confidently identify every account that ever truly formed part of your debt review.
Clearance Happens Per Account
This is perhaps the most important point.
A Clearance Certificate is not issued because every creditor has been dealt with.
It is issued because every qualifying credit agreement has been properly accounted for.
That means every agreement must ultimately be confirmed as either:
- settled;
- legally prescribed (where applicable); or
- excluded by law (such as a continuing mortgage).
If even one qualifying account cannot be explained, verified or supported with appropriate evidence, further investigation is required before lawful clearance can take place.
Why Original Paid-Up Emails Matter
Consumers are sometimes surprised when we ask them to forward the original email received from the creditor instead of simply sending the PDF paid-up letter.
The reason is straightforward. It will need to be uploaded to the Credit bureau Platform as part of your clearance file.
The paid-up letter is only one part of the evidence.
The original email also allows us to verify:
- who issued the letter;
- which creditor or authorised representative it came from;
- the originating email address used during verification.
These details help demonstrate the authenticity of the documentation during the clearance process and is a requirement for successful upload at all the bureaus.
The Reconstruction Process
- When transferred matters arrive at our office, our first task is not issuing a Clearance Certificate.
- Our first task is reconstructing the history of the debt review itself.
Before we can even consider clearance, we ask five questions:
Checkpoint 1
Can we identify every credit agreement that formed part of the debt review?
Checkpoint 2
Can every agreement be verified as settled or legally prescribed, using evidence received directly from the creditor or authorised representative? If there is a bond, do we have proof that it is not currently in arrears?
Checkpoint 3
Is there sufficient verified information to lawfully accept the transfer?
Checkpoint 4
Professional reconstruction begins, verifying each individual credit agreement-not simply each creditor.
Checkpoint 5
Once every qualifying agreement has been reconciled, the file progresses through clearance preparation, bureau verification and ultimately, confirmation that the debt review has been successfully removed.
This cannot be accomplished in a day or two. Red tape and proper procedures ensure a valid clearance is issued and a consumer can be authentically, verifiably be declared as “debt free” on all platforms.
The process ensures that your completion of debt review is visible and concluded with all the parties involved in it.
The Bottom Line
When someone says, “I only had one creditor,” they’re usually describing the company they remember.
When we prepare a lawful Clearance Certificate, we’re looking much deeper.
We’re identifying every credit agreement, tracing its history, confirming its outcome and ensuring the evidence supports every statement we make.
Because a Clearance Certificate isn’t simply a document.
It’s a legal certification.
And legal certifications are built on verified facts-one account at a time.
Nadia de Weerdt is a Registered Debt Counsellor NCRDC3360 for Sandton Debt Counselling and former Western Cape Representative of DCASA


