1. river valley loans prequalified
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    Using the example above, on the original due date you don’t repay the $500 loan. Instead, you pay only the $75 fee and roll over the $500 loan for another two weeks. The rollover will cost you another $75 fee.
    Two weeks after rolling over the loan, you still owe the lender $500 for the loan, plus the new $75 fee.
    The bottom line: The cost of the original $500 loan has gone from $75 to $150 due to the rollover.
  2. rivervalleyloans prequalified
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    If you can’t repay the loan when it’s due, many lenders will let you extend the due date for another two or four weeks — but you have to pay the fee that's due, plus a new fee to extend the due date. It's called a “rollover.” Each time you roll over the loan, the lender will charge you a new fee and you'll still owe the entire original loan amount. With rollovers, the cost of the loan goes up very quickly.
  3. rivervalleyloans.com prequalified
    rivervalleyloans.com prequalified

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    You want to borrow $500. The lender offers you a two-week loan. The fee is $15 for every $100 you borrow. So your fee will be $75. ($15 x 5 = $75).
    You give the lender a check for $575, or you authorize the lender to electronically debit your bank account. The lender gives you $500 in cash.
    Two weeks later, you owe the lender $575. The lender will either debit your bank account, cash your check, or take cash or another form of payment from you, depending on how you agreed to repay the loan.
    The bottom line: You paid $75 to borrow $500 for two weeks.
 
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