I'd say if you can't pay it you can't pay it. That's all there is to it. If you have no money you have no money. No matter how you put it, if you don't have enough money to make a payment then you can't make one.
When a collector calls me I tell them I don't have any money and to please take me off the call list. Of course they don't take me off the list but there is nothing I can do. If I had money for paying bills I'd go to the doc and get medical treatment for my health issues.
People who have enough do not have any idea how people can be poor enough to not be able to pay bills. I understand this since I am poor. I work 3 part time jobs but 2 of them are not for money. One is for barter to pay for the kids dance and gymnastics lessons. If I didn't send the kids to classes I would not be allowed to work for cash. I work about 4 hours per week helping customers pick out leotards and tap or ballet shoes. Not hard work at all.
Another of my jobs is cleaning house for my FIL. I wipe down the kitchen cabinets, steam mop the floor, make his bed, take out the trash, and clean the toilet. Same stuff I do at home. He gives us a Conoco gasoline card and asks us to keep it under a few hundred per month if possible. He has never said anything if we go over.
I iron for a couple of people and this money I get paid is what I use to pay for my shampoo and other toiletries/ I file this as income every year. I hardly ever make enough to pay anything though.
So when a bill collector calls I tell them I have no money. They can't do anything to me, I have no income they can garnish, they can sue me but there is nothing they can do to me. I wish I had money to pay the bills but if I had money there wouldn't be any bills because I would be able to pay for health care. That's what it really comes down to.
I have no insurance so if I need medical care my only choice is to go to the ER. I can't pay that high bill so they send if off to the collection agency. Although they do occasionally let the bill go to their social services department and they write the bills off for the whole amount.
It's hot how I imagined living at my age. My hubby's heart attack and 100% blockages inside his heart along with a couple of aneurysms really threw a money wrench in his career and our retirement.
He had a quadruple bypass. He still has issues with his leg because that's the hardest part to heal and not get over. So he is now on SSDI.
We are raising 2 of my 7 grand kids. So the kids get a little bit of child support, I use that for their needs. With hubby's SSDI and the child support we don't qualify for any programs such as food stamps or financial assistance. We do qualify for food banks and programs like that.
So I'd say don't worry about the bills and pay what you can pay when you can make a payment. BUT as long as they have the bill they are building interest on the amount. Any payment you pay will most likely go to interest only and not bring the principle down any at all. So make sure you talk to them and try to get the interest stopped so any money goes to make the bill less.