As somebody who lives in country where credit cards are mostly used when going abroad for a vacation, this whole comment section is wild.
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Forget the credit card, tell me you're on anxiety meds.
I don't know what I'm reading.
Here people mostly use debit cards, and we don't worry about things like credit scores or whatever. Also these cards tend to be free. At the end, they just give you a convenient way of paying with money you actually own.
Why would anyone buy normal stuff using credit? I get it for big purchases as a house or a car. But why go into debt for groceries or a new laptop?
In the US and Canada, a person's credit score is used to figure out how safe it is to lend them money. Big ticket items such as cars and houses are often bought on credit with a payment plan that includes interest - so the entity lending the money makes money off the loan. Good credit score = Less risk to the lender = Lower interest rate for the borrower = Less money spent in the long run.
Credit cards are an easy way to build a good credit score. I use mine for almost every purchase I make: groceries, gas, bills, subscriptions, donations. The things is, I pay it off in full each month (so I don't pay interest fees to the credit card company) AND my card gives me 2% money back on my purchases. So if I use it for $20,000 worth of purchases, I automatically get $400 back. Free money!
Also, my bank limits the amount of transactions I can make in a month to 12. They charge a small fee from the 13th transaction onward. If I had to pay for everything directly by debit, I'd probably end up paying tens of dollars just in fees, each month!
Edited to add: By using my credit card and paying it in full, I demonstrate I'm trustworthy when it comes to credit, because I pay it back. That's what a lender wants! This makes my credit score go up, which in turn helps me when I want to buy a car or get a mortgage on a house. I got my first credit card when I was 18, following the advice of my parents, and that has served me extremely well 15 years later! Who would you rather lend $20,000 to: someone who makes $50,000 and reliably pays back their credit card in full each month for 10 years and has zero debt, or someone who makes $500,000 but carries a $100,000 debt on their credit card?
So people who are savvy about credit do not buy everything "on credit" just because they pay for it with a credit card. It is legitimately a good way to save (or even make) money, at least in the US and Canada.
How is this kind of discrimination even legal there?
Credit cards offer protection over debit cards. After all, it's the banks money if something fraudulent happens on a transaction, not yours. I always use my credit card over my debit card mainly for this reason.
Some credit cards offer cash back or rewards which build up when you spend.
I have a direct debit set up to pay off the balance at the end of the month so it just automatically pays itself off.
Credit cards have good protections against fraudulent webshops and often provide free insurance against damage and theft. This makes it worthwhile for buying a new laptop.
My card is automatically fully paid off at the end of the month, so mhe debt is very temporary
Ppl downvoting you is wild. Let's not bring in toxic reddit traits. Not everyone is from BurgerCredit land. Perfectly valid question. SO to Stelor for explaining in a reply.
I have a chase sapphire reserve (visa) that has a credit limit of $24,000. I don't understand why you keep picking cards with low credit limits. Do your research first then apply. Plus credit limits are based on your history with the bank and your annual income. If you have a low income, then they won't approve a large credit limit.
Also do you not read the sign on the stores you shop at? Pretty sure they advertise which card network they accept.
You can also literally call customer service and ask for the stipulations for an increase.
Credit cards are not your clothes.
Is your name Chidi Anagonye?
I'm Chidi Anagonye, or maybe I'm not?
Does your stomach hurt?
find one that has no fees. pay it off every month. it doesn't matter what your credit limit is
You're financially ruined.
Give up all hope and mail me your credit cards, OP. I'll "dispose" of them "properly" for you.
- How much are you spending on your cards every month???
- Why not have more than one card for different things, rather than cancelling cards?
- You generally want to very rarely cancel a credit card, I recommend finding one with no annual fees and sticking with it. You can always have more cards after all.
- A spending limit doesn’t really mean anything if you payoff your credit early, you can always request that your CC company release your credit early once you pay it off early.
Opening and closing a new accounts has literally no effect on your credit score.
The credit agencies pulling your report has a pretty minimal and very short lived.
Your score was an 830. I'll be surprised if it dips below 800. And that is still exceptional.
Unless you have an immediate need to get a really good interest rate, you should not lose any sleep over this.
Was it dumb? Yes
Is it easily corrected with some on time payments over the course of 6 months? Yes
They cacel each other out. You good
You most likely have a number of credit inquiries on your account now. The bad news is that it hurts your credit score. The good news is that they go away over the course of a few years to five years. I'd do a lot of research before getting another card. Get a basic one. I use mine for modest purchases like groceries. Credit cards also benefit from purchase protection, and serious tradeoffs like Rewards, which come from transaction fees (which in turn tend to raise prices on all goods that accept credit cards. There's no such thing as a free lunch).
You shouldn't be maxing your credit anyways, so 5k should be fine. Pay it off every month, the interest rate is insanely high if you fall behind. It's better to get a loan from a bank for massive purchases.
Ps- I wouldn't get a card that has annual charges, unless you are doing like, a shitload of foreign transactions whose transaction fees exceed the cost of the annual CC fee. Usually this doesn't pencil out unless you are Canadian and there's an American Costco a 25 minute drive from your place near the border.
If you really want to spend lots of money to reap the rewards from the credit cards, you can prepay them, so that your balance will be negative. You'll also be seen as having "low revolving utilization."
The downside is you need the money upfront of course, money that could've been being invested.
oh that’s right we don’t have a credit card or travel Lemmy yet. Okay, take down a few notes.
First you haven’t done anything terrible. Probably you’ve knocked your credit score down about 10 or 15 points. Not because of the opening and closing, but because multiple hard inquiries of your credit can cause the score to drop. That will repair itself over the next six months.
Something good to know is that American Express cards will only give you their sign-up bonus once per lifetime per person per card. I know that Chase will let you reapply two years after you drop a card and will give you the bonus, and I believe that’s the standard for other Visa cards or MasterCard.
I strongly recommend that you look at cards based on the rewards plan that they’ll provide you and the amount of spending required for you to be able to get the reward. I own several businesses so a $4000 or a $6000 spend is not a big deal for me over three months, But when I didn’t have that, I would need to figure out if I could make that spend over the required time period and go one card at a time. so back in my early days I was getting one card every three or four months, and then canceling cards about a year or two in, and then reapplying for them two years later.
I know that sounds complicated, but when you wanna fly to Australia, free and business class, and you don’t have a lot of money, that’s how you work the system.
Something good to know is there are essentially three tiers of credit cards. There are basic cards that will give you a lower reward, have a low spending requirement, and are generally with no annual fee. Then there is a second tier of cards, which will usually have a $95 per year fee, which is waived for the first year, and they have more rewards and perks. Then there is a third tier of cards that will have much higher spends (sometimes $6000-$10,000 in 3 to 6 months), but they will have much larger rewards along with about a $500 fee. I recommend staying away from the higher to your cards unless you can play that game and it’s not an issue.
OK, that is our Lemmy primer for everyone interested in credit card points.
Edit: I also strongly recommend you get one of the lower tier cards now, and keep that one with no anual fee from now on. Part of credit history is card longevity; I am a charter cardmember of a card from years ago for that reason.
Iirc, closing an account impacts your credit not because you cancelled your account, but because it impacts your debt/credit ratio.
You have 2 credit cards. Card A has a 10k credit and 2k balance. Card B has 10k credit and 0 balance.
So your ratio is 2k/20k or 10%.
If you cancel card B, your credit line is now 2k/10k, which is 20%. This increases your credit utilization, which impacts your score.
Opening and closing a bunch of cards without any balance shouldn't have a significant impact on your score, maybe a few points.
Hard inquiries can be bad but most credit cards use soft inquiries nowadays anyway
You can easily get your credit score from any number of places, just do a google search or like call your bank. They’re never gonna be the same but they are usually within 5-10 points depending on the source.
But the real question is: why the hell were you opening so many credit cards in the first place?