Credit card balance transfers are one of the financial world's great empowering features, but they can only be done successfully if you follow the rules and don't fall foul of them. Firstly you must consider the benefits, then the pitfalls. These two aspects are more or less permanent features of the credit card balance transfer system.
The benefits can be summarised as the product of a twofold strategy:
You can transfer credit card balances once the initial interest free period is up to another card, and so continue your interest free credit.
You can more or less plan to do this in advance as long as you have a way of finding new cards to transfer to, and you stay in control of your finances and spending.
Taking these two together - the transfers and the planning - you can aim to give yourself interest free credit for a long time, even interest free credit for years.
The pitfalls are as follows, and must be considered carefully. These are:
Overshooting the Interest Free period
This is a crucial and fundamental issue. There is no point taking out a card with a known zero interest period or low interest period if you just go and breach that time period. Check the date that the interest free allotment ends, and then backtrack by about ten days before then. Ten days is about the right time to apply for a new card. Remember that the application itself will take time, and that this time will vary from card to card. Take into account seasonal changes in the speed and effectiveness of the mail delivery. In the run up to Christmas, for example, it would be wise to allow two weeks.
Minimum Repayment Obligations
Remember to check on what your agreed monthly repayment arrangements are. You may have to pay back a certain percentage (three percent or more, depending on the card) or risk incurring minimum payment fees. This is true even if it occurs within the interest free period, as the credit card provider will want to know that you can at least maintain a minimum repayment to justify the confidence in you when you originally signed up. On some cards, however, such an arrangement may not apply.
Late Payment Obligations
Much the same as above, but this time the emphasis is on paying within a certain time per month. Again, the card issuer may want some kind of assurance that money will be repaid even though interest is not being charged. There will be an extra fee charged if your payment is late, and for small balances this may well be proportionally higher than the interest which would otherwise have been payable (if the charge is a lump sum, as is usually the case). If this arrangement exists, then the best policy is to pay the minimum the same day as you get the statement.
Annual Fees
Remember to check the small print before you apply for the card. This may include information about an annual fee, which is the fee that the issuer will charge you every year for using their credit card. By no means all credit cards have an annual fee, but you must remember to build this in to the total cost of using the card. Things like annual fees tend to muddy the APR figures, which would otherwise give a good indication of how much your credit card actually costs. It is therefore an important factor to consider when deciding which credit card is the right one for you.
Exceeding Your Credit Limit
Whatever you do, don't exceed the credit limit that you agreed and signed up for at the time you applied for the card. If you do this then you will probably be charged (depending on the card supplier) a percentage or a flat fee. This would be particularly reckless, as it would go against everything that you set out to do in the first place, namely to gain a fixed amount of credit without paying any interest on it!
Of the above five negative factors to be considered, it is always best to think of them all together, as each of them may impact in different proportions depending on the credit card and lender. For example, one card may not charge annual fees, but will come down very heavy on late payment charges; while another card will be lenient about an overextended credit limit but will offset this with a fixed annual charge.
It is possible to meet the criteria of the first two positive benefits, as well as avoid all the pitfalls by careful timing. As long as you transfer your credit card balances in a timely fashion, and observe the rules of the transfer itself, you cannot go wrong. Always remember that there are more credit cards out there to transfer your balances to.
Credit Card With Balance Transfers
So, you acquired a credit card and maybe spent a little too much and now find yourself barely being able to pay back the interest let alone the principle? Most peoples stories are somewhere along these lines, and it can be extremely worrying, particularly for people who are paying as much as they can already and who's wages aren't subject to any further earnings from overtime and so-forth, because this affords you very little chance of making any headway in paying the debt back.
Banks purposely give people credit cards because they know people will eventually incur interest, maybe default on a payment or two incurring fines for none or late payments. All of this is music to the banks ear; this is exactly what they want you to do. In fact, credit cards are known to be perhaps the highest interest money-borrowing schemes in the world, and they can sometimes leave you paying out more money than you would to a mafia loan shark.
I have been in this situation myself before, where I was paying as much as I could afford per month, but I was barely touching the principle debt and only just covering the interest. I knew I couldn't get out of this situation so began researching into ways to try and get a grip on my debt. At first I considered asking the bank for a lower interest loan and paying off my credit card. This may have worked, but I would still have being paying off interest every month and I simply couldn't afford it, and for the little less-interest I would have being paying, it wasn't worth it.
Then, I found just what I had been looking for - an ideal solution provided by the bank which would help me get out of this cycle of debt. By going to another bank and getting a credit card with 0% interest for the first 6 months, I did a credit card balance transfer from my old interest-incurring credit card onto my new one. This way, I would still have to pay back the few grand I owed, but for 6 months I would be paying zero interest. And just before this credit cards offer of 0% interest elapsed, I obtained another credit card elsewhere and did the same, another balance transfer. By the time the year was out I had managed to pay back the bulk of my debt and my life became infinitely less stressful.
Many people aren't aware that a credit card balance transfer exists, but they do, and the debt-receiving banks will gladly allow you to transfer you're balance to them because don't forget - banks want you to be in debt to them, and this is one way in which they are sure they are liable to make a few bob off you. The trick is to not give them chance and continue transferring the balance between banks until it is paid off.
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