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Does deleting the Ualá app erase your debt? Don’t be stupid.

Don ROI

8 hours ago

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There are people who genuinely think that deleting the Ualá app makes their debt disappear. I got a message that said: “Don Roi, I deleted the app and they’re still emailing me, what’s going on?” Bro. BRO.

This is like thinking that if you close your eyes, the Silent Hill monster disappears. News flash: it’s still there. And now it got you because you didn’t see it coming.

Debt doesn’t live in your phone. It lives in the central bank, in credit bureaus, in every financial database in the country. And if you ignore it, it grows like mold on a forgotten pastry.

Why deleting the app is the worst move possible

Imagine you owe money in an online game. What do you do? Uninstall the game and pretend it never happened? No, because your account still exists, your debt keeps growing, and you just lost the only way to see it and fix it.

Deleting Ualá (or any fintech app) is exactly that. The debt stays. The interest keeps running. Your credit score keeps dropping like a Smash Bros character with no recovery. And now you’ve lost visibility.

Even worse: when you try to get a loan, a credit card, or even rent an apartment, that debt will show up like a high-level ghost. And you’ll end up paying someone a lot of money to “clean” your record.

The reality no one tells you about debt

Fintechs like Ualá, Mercado Pago, Naranja X — they all report to the central bank and credit bureaus. That means your debt is officially recorded. This isn’t something you can just ignore.

If you don’t pay, you get flagged. If you keep ignoring it, it gets worse. And if you delete the app, you lose your chance to negotiate or even slow down the interest.

Here’s the truth: fintechs WANT you to pay. They don’t want to sue you (it’s expensive for them too). Most of the time, you can negotiate. But to do that, you need to contact them. If you delete the app… well, you just cut your only line of communication.

The numbers don’t lie: what happens if you ignore it

Let’s say you owe $50,000 with a 120% annual rate:

  • Month 1: $50,000 → $55,000
  • Month 3: $55,000 → $66,000
  • Month 6: $66,000 → $87,000
  • Year 1: $87,000 → $110,000

And that’s WITHOUT collection fees or penalties.

If instead you call and say “I can pay X per month,” they’ll usually offer a payment plan. Lower interest, no penalties, and you might end up paying less.

Why people who understand money don’t panic

Having debt isn’t the end of the world. Ignoring it is.

People who manage money well follow one rule: if debt appears, attack it immediately. Because debt interest is ALWAYS higher than investment returns.

Simple math: if your investment returns 40% but your debt costs 120%, where does your money go? To the debt. Always.

If you don’t have savings, then apply Rule 1: spend less than you earn. If you can’t, then earn more. Sell things, freelance, stream, work extra. Whatever it takes. But don’t ignore it.

Don Roi’s lesson

  1. Spend less than you earn. If you can’t, earn more.
  2. Save and invest FIRST every month.
  3. Increase that percentage over time (goal: 10–20%).
  4. Live with the rest. Life moves fast.

These rules always apply.

Action plan if you have debt

Do this TODAY:

  1. Open the app you’re avoiding.
  2. Write down EXACTLY how much you owe.
  3. Look for refinancing or payment plans.
  4. If not available, call support.
  5. Make a deal and PAY.

Deleting the app doesn’t delete the debt. Facing it does.

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ualáborrar appdeuda financieradon roimanejo de deudasfintechbcrascoring crediticioplan de pagosnegociación de deudafinanzas personalesahorro e inversióneducación financierahábitos financierosingresos pasivosfondo de emergenciagestión de deudas

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