Top Credit Card Mistakes
Like it or not, we are a credit card culture. They seem to be
everywhere. They are on TV, being promoted by the likes of Jimmy Fallon,
Alec Baldwin and "Ogre" from Revenge of the Nerds. The imagery is
pervasive, and some places ONLY take credit or debit cards. They are
also, obviously, in our wallets. There are an estimated 1.5 billion credit cards
in use in the United States and that can make them seem pretty
ubiquitous. Nevertheless, access to credit cards is a privilege not a
right, and if you make mistakes, you'll pay a price – sometimes a hefty
one.
With that in mind, we offer this list of serious credit card mistakes and their equally serious repercussions.
3. Charging Anywhere Near Your Credit Limit |
There may be certain life crises that require you to charge a large
amount, like an emergency car repair. Try to pay down the balance as
quickly as possible. Creditors look very closely every month at the
percentage of your available credit that you are using. If you use more
than 10% for any meaningful period of time, it will hurt your credit
score. 30% of your credit score relates to your credit utilization. If
your credit score declines, your cost of borrowing will increase and
your access to credit will become more limited. (If you're not sure what
your credit utilization ratio is, use Credit.com's free Credit Report Card for a breakdown.)
4. Taking Credit Card Cash Advances |
5. Closing Old Credit Card Accounts |
Closing a credit card account may seem like the best way to celebrate
paying off a big, old debt, but consider this: every account represents a
component of your available credit and each time you remove such a
component by closing it, you are reducing the pool of available credit
against which all your credit balances are measured. The less available
credit you have, the greater percentage you are using whenever you
charge something in another account. Exceed 10% and your credit score is
likely to be negatively impacted. When you pay off an account, feel
free to cut up the card, but think twice before you close the account.
6. Ignoring the Fine Print |
10. Sending Credit Card Information Via Email |
The only thing dumber than entering your credit card information on a website that you discovered by way of a random email link
is to send credit card information through your email account. A great
number of hackers are looking forward to sharing your credit card
information with their friends and associates for their profit and
amusement. Their enrichment is not your mission. If
you want to buy something or pay a bill online, go to the right
financial or retail site, type in the correct URL and make sure it is
secure (look for the lock and the "https" in the web address field).
A credit card is a vehicle. You are the driver. If you operate it safely
and responsibly it will give you access to the things you want while
helping you build a credit portfolio that is an asset, not a liability.
source: abcnews.go.com
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