Credit cards are
a form of unsecured credit. The issuer is extending you a line of
credit, usually tacking on all sorts of little surprises in the fine
print. This type of credit is probably the most commonly
used.
If you have a great credit rating, you’re probably
bombarded with offers of new cards. They usually carry no annual
fees, the interest rates are reasonable (as far as credit cards go),
you get close to a month’s grace period and there might be some
fetching initial offers, such as no interest for 6 months on balance
transfers and new purchasers.
Others of us who are not so
lucky, might have to pay $20 or more a year for a card, the
interest rates will be higher and the come-ons less enticing or
non-existent. Grace periods may be as short as 20 days and you might
have to make sure you payment is received early enough so the credit
card company will consider it paid on time.
Still others
might not be able to get anything other than a secured credit
card, one where you make a deposit first and then are allowed to
charge to the extent of the deposit. This kind of card, while
expensive, can be helpful in rebuilding credit if you have had
credit problems.
Then there are cards like the original
American Express or Diner’s Club cards, where you’re expected to pay
the entire bill every month as it comes due. This kind of card
forces you to be more careful with your spending, although it is
becoming more frequent for a line of credit to be attached to them
also, to allow you to pay for some purchases over
time.
Credit cards are not bad things in and of themselves,
but can become bad things very quickly. You can charge just about
anything and get to pay for it about a month later. You can take
part in the many rewards programs and get points for things you
would have bought anyway, like food or gasoline. This is all
great if you pay off the bill every month.
The problem is
that if you run up your credit card debt, but only pay the
minimum payment, that $300 TV you got on sale will really cost
well over $1000. It can take 10 or more years to pay off a $5000
debt if you only pay the minimum each month. Most people are
unlikely to want to pay off a tank off gas ten years after it
was used up.
If you read your monthly statements closely, you
will see that the monthly minimum payment is barely enough to
cover your interest due for that month. You are not making any
dent in the amount you owe.
So probably the best solution is
to stay away from credit cards. But that probably is also not a
realistic solution for most people. And credit cards are
necessary for some things; for example if you want to rent a
car. They can be very handy in an emergency.
The only
realistic solution is to charge only what you can pay off
quickly. The next best choice is to pay as much more over the
minimum payment due as you can afford. Or consolidate your
credit card debt into a lower interest loan or line of credit,
but only if you destroy all your
cards and never apply for new ones.
Many people made a
habit of maxing out their cards and then going bankrupt. Their
credit card debt would be wiped out in the bankruptcy court and
they would get a "fresh start". In March 2005, the US Congress
drastically changed the bankruptcy code, limiting access by
individuals to Chapter 7 of the code, which was the section of
the law that sharply limited repayment of debt.
Credit card
companies now check your credit report frequently, sometimes
every month. Even if you are never late in your payments to
them, they may decide you are no longer a prime customer and may
raise your rate.
Some of the things the banks are looking at
is your use of your overall debt – if your ratio gets too high
they get scared. Another event that may trigger a rate increase
is a late payment to another credit card company or even to the
phone or electric company.
Being even one day late with a
payment to any creditor may trigger up to a four times increase
in your interest rate. If you’re using one of the free or very
low interest offers banks use to lure you to them, they will
likely hike your rate as high as 29%.
So, one final note
about credit cards: do not ignore the little messages the banks
send you either in your statement or separately. They may
contain nasty surprises, like an increase in your interest rate
that you can avoid by simply writing the credit card company and
no longer using their card. I personally got one of those love
notes, trying to raise my interest rate from about 14% to almost
24%. Needless to say, that card went into the
garbage.
Now more than ever, you must learn to use credit
responsibly. The quick escape of bankruptcy will be harder to
come by and it is just too costly over the long term to ruin
your credit rating at any point in your life.
A bad credit
score not only affects the interest rate you will pay on credit
cards, personal loans and mortgages, but also may affect your
ability to get a job, rent an apartment or result in an increase
in your auto insurance premiums.
So take those little pieces
of plastic seriously and handle credit cards wisely.