Can't cover it this month? Here's the order to work it.
Being short is a cash-flow problem, not a verdict on you — and there's a real playbook for it. Work it in order: the fastest help first, the traps last (skip them entirely). Not financial or legal advice — a sourced starting map. Programs and eligibility change; verify each before you rely on it.
Call the biller before the due date
Utilities, landlords, lenders, hospitals — most have payment plans, hardship programs, and extensions, but mostly for people who call before they're past due. Ask for the "hardship" or "financial assistance" desk by name. A medical bill? Ask about charity care / financial assistance — nonprofit hospitals are often required to offer it.
Stop a utility shutoff (Michigan)
For heat/electric: State Emergency Relief (SER) and LIHEAP help with energy bills and shutoff crises — apply through MI Bridges: newmibridges.michigan.gov (or michigan.gov/mdhhs). Ask your utility about shutoff protections / Winter Protection. Billing dispute or unfair shutoff? The MI Public Service Commission helps consumers: michigan.gov/mpsc. Utility-help directory: mi211.org/utility-assistance-programs.
Free up cash you're owed
Every fixed cost a program covers is cash back in your pocket for the bill that's due. SNAP (food) & other benefits: apply at MI Bridges or check eligibility at benefits.gov. Food today, no cost: find a pantry via Feeding America's locator. (Out of EBT and hungry tonight? See the aspirational Spot $20 idea.)
Triage what's left — by consequence, not by guilt
If you still can't cover everything, pay in order of what hurts worst to lose: housing & utilities & food & insurance first; unsecured stuff (credit cards, medical) can wait and negotiate. Missing a card payment is recoverable; losing the roof or the heat is not. Pay the consequence, not the loudest collector.
Specific programs (Michigan utilities & internet)
Consumers Energy — CARE
The CARE program pays down past-due balances while you make regular payments, and the Winter Protection Plan blocks shutoff Dec 1–Mar 31 for low-income customers & all seniors 65+. Enroll by dialing 2-1-1 and saying "Consumers Energy CARE." Details: consumersenergy.com (payment assistance).
Lansing Board of Water & Light (BWL)
BWL offers low-income & senior (65+) assistance, emergency hardship funds, the donation-funded Pennies for Power shutoff protection, and levelized (same-each-month) billing. Call customer service before you're past due to set a plan: lbwl.com.
Internet — Xfinity Internet Essentials
Comcast's Internet Essentials offers low-cost home internet (recently ~$14.95/mo) for households on programs like Medicaid, SNAP, or housing assistance, or under 200% of the poverty line (eligibility rules apply). (The federal ACP subsidy ended in 2024, but this program continues.) Apply / check: xfinity.com/internetessentials. Other providers run similar low-income plans — ask yours.
Find more by ZIP — the tool
Type findhelp anywhere on the site (or needhelp) to open the Find Help Near You tool — ZIP or one-time GPS (never stored) that points you to 211, Benefits.gov, MI Bridges, and this house's wings.
The traps to skip (they make it worse)
Payday / car-title loans: APRs can run into the triple digits and trap you in a roll-over cycle. Treat them as a last-last resort, if ever. How they work & safer options: CFPB.
"Pay us in gift cards": any "agency," "utility," "boss," or stranger demanding gift cards is a scam, full stop — see the Dignity Wing's safety note.
Advance-fee "grants": a real grant never asks you to pay money first to get money. If they want a fee up front, it's fake.