Latest bank fee is for paying off credit card on time every month

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  • jedi

    Da PinkFather
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    SOURCE: Latest bank fee is for paying off credit card on time every month - USATODAY.com

    By Sandra Block, USA TODAY
    You floss regularly, yield to oncoming traffic and use your credit cards judiciously, dutifully paying off your balance every month.
    You may believe that your exemplary behavior shields you from unexpected credit card fees. Sadly, that is no longer the case.
    Starting next year, Bank of America will charge a small number of customers an annual fee, ranging from $29 to $99. The bank has characterized the fee as experimental. But card holders who have never carried a balance or paid late fees could be among those affected.


    Citigroup, meanwhile, has started charging annual fees to card holders who don't put more than a specific amount on their cards, typically $2,400 a year. Other banks are charging inactivity fees if customers don't use their credit cards during a specific period of time. You heard that right: You could be spanked for staying out of debt.
    These fees are the credit card industry's response to credit card legislation that will, among other things, restrict credit card issuers' ability to raise interest rates on existing balances. Credit card issuers are looking for ways to raise income before the new rules take effect in February. During the first quarter, 27% of credit card offers included annual fees, up from 18% a year earlier, according to Synovate Mail Monitor, a credit card direct-mail tracking service.
    Curtis Arnold, founder of CardRatings.com, says he expected credit card issuers to raise annual fees after the legislation was enacted. What he didn't expect, he says, "was that good customers were going to be hit."
    Fortunately, if you've paid off your balance on time every month, you probably have a good credit score. And when you have good credit, you have more choices.
    What to do if your card issuer starts charging an annual fee — or increases the fee you're already paying:
    •Call and complain. Check your credit score first to make sure you're on solid ground, says Adam Levin, founder of Credit.com, a consumer website. If you have a good score and you've been a good customer, the lender may be willing to waive the fee to keep your business.
    •Weigh the benefits of rewards against the annual fee. The days when you could get a rewards card with no annual fee are numbered, Arnold says. If your rewards card charges a fee, you'll need to figure out whether the value of the rewards exceeds the fee.
    That's not always easy to do, particularly with cards that give you airline miles, says Chris Fichera, associate editor for Consumer Reports. Rewards miles often come with restrictions and expiration dates, making it difficult to figure out how much they're worth, he says.
    "A lot of airline cards are not the best deal unless you can combine them with a frequent-flier plan," Fichera adds.
    If you're not a frequent flier, Fichera says, you're probably better off using a card that gives you cash back. As long as you can estimate how much you spend, it's easy to figure out whether you'll get enough cash back to justify the annual fee.
    •Leave. If your card issuer won't waive the fee, you'll have a choice: Pay the annoying fee or close your account. Unfortunately, this decision isn't as clear-cut as it sounds, because closing an account could hurt your credit score. [see note of mine below]

    One of the factors used to calculate your credit score is what's known as the "credit utilization ratio," which is based on the amount of credit you have outstanding as a percentage of your total available credit. When you close a credit card account, the amount of your total available credit shrinks, which could lead to a higher utilization rate. This ratio accounts for 30% of your credit score.
    In addition, closing an account you've owned a long time could affect your credit history, another factor used to calculate your score, Fichera says.
    Still, if you aren't carrying balances on your other accounts and the card is relatively new, closing your account is worth considering. Even now, there are good deals out there, particularly for card holders with good credit, Arnold says. For example, the Fidelity Rewards American Express card pays 2% of cash back to a Fidelity account, with no limits on cash rewards and no annual fee.
    If you don't care about rewards and just want a credit card that doesn't charge an annual fee, consider applying for a card through a credit union. Many credit union cards charge no annual fee and offer below-average interest rates.
    Associations, such as the USAA, which provides products and services for military personnel and their families, also offer good deals on credit cards, according to Consumer Reports.
    Sandra Block covers personal finance for USA TODAY. Her Your Money column appears Tuesdays. Click here for an index of Your Money columns. E-mail her at: sblock@usatoday.com. Follow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sandyblock

    ---
    Per Dave Ramsey your credit score is NOTHING more than a formula to see how much debt you take on for a long period of time and pay just the min. In essence the HIGHER your credit score the better you are at having lots of debt and paying it off slowly!

    The hell with credit cards! 18 more months and I'm out of CC debt and NEVER, EVER, EVER, EVER AGAIN!!!
     

    printcraft

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    Of course. You are encouraged to be in debt.
    Also, how will they make any money on interest if you never allow them into the position to collect?
    Paying off and getting rid of them is the best bet.
    The only ones I have are through work for work purchases only.
    Learned that lesson long ago.:twocents:
     

    DestructionDan

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    Had a CC maxed it out learned how much it cost to use plastic
    Paid it off & cut up the card.

    They do anything they can to get your hard earned cash.
    Printcraft is right pay them off & cut them up.
     

    Jack Ryan

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    bankers are right up there with anti-gun people on my list--always have been---they are greed driven.

    Politicians
    Lawyers
    Bankers
    GM executive board
    A lot of doctors
    Advertising
    Real Estate agents
    Illegal aliens...

    That would be a good start.
     

    LEaSH

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    There are broad brushes at lowe's on sale if anybody needs some more.

    My real estate agent is kinda - no she's definately smokin' hot.. I give her a pass for the way she conducts her work. I got my moneys worth. It was all ethical and fair. Truely.

    Superficial a-hole I know I know.
     

    CountryBoy19

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    You can't tell me that you didn't see this coming. I saw it coming before the legislation even passed. I knew that if the couldn't get their money via interest, they'd get it via annual fees etc. Its just that simple. One bad apple spoils the whole bunch; so to protect the person that can't, or won't pay their bill off every month, now everybody else has to pay a fee.
     

    rambone

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    You guys realize that our beloved congress passed a law that caused this, right?? If this was a such a good money-maker, they would have been charging all along. They are being forced to compensate for Government interference in their business. Change has come to America!!

    This is a bank-killer. All the responsible customers will leave in droves. The banks will be left with only the debtors and will suffer. Read my thread on this from several months ago:


    https://www.indianagunowners.com/fo...ill_of_rights_-_free_market_interference.html
     

    rambone

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    'Merica
    11sib5u.jpg
     

    6birds

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    Fishers
    All the responsible customers will leave in droves.
    No. The responsible people don't burn cash paying interest to someone else.

    The banks will be left with only the debtors and will suffer.

    So what?
     

    deranged222

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    Sad....

    The sad part is once the people pay off their cards and discontinue their use, the cc companies will be crying and looking for more bailout money.... It's sad to see the middle class shrinking the way that it is.
     

    Scutter01

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    The sad part is once the people pay off their cards and discontinue their use, the cc companies will be crying and looking for more bailout money.... It's sad to see the middle class shrinking the way that it is.

    Fortunately for the CC companies, the number of responsible people who pay off their cards and discontinue their use will always be a very tiny percentage of the American public. :rolleyes:
     

    rambone

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    All the responsible customers will leave in droves.
    No. The responsible people don't burn cash paying interest to someone else.

    The banks will be left with only the debtors and will suffer.

    So what?

    This is the Government's way of bringing another industry to its knees and then nationalizing it. Maybe you are so blinded by your hatred for banks that you can't see anything wrong with Government taking over industries.

    I'd rather have the option to deal with a private bank and receive a line of credit, than be forced to deal with the Government. Do you want to get your mortgage from the Government? Do you want the Government to own your house, your car, etc? Banks lend money, and they stay in business by being paid extra upon return.



    The sad part is once the people pay off their cards and discontinue their use, the cc companies will be crying and looking for more bailout money....


    And I'm sure our Socialist leaders will be happy to oblige. They leap at the chance to waste some taxpayer money. In this case they would use it as an opportunity toward taking over banks, once they are insolvent. The writing is on the wall.
     
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    6birds

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    This is the Government's way of bringing another industry to its knees and then nationalizing it. Maybe you are so blinded by your hatred for banks that you can't see anything wrong with Government taking over industries.
    You changed the subject. I don't care if someone gets charged for credit cards, predatory loans, or smoking cigarettes, I have made the choice not to supoport those industries, voted with my wallet. Your rage against all things directed you there, I didn't. Call prometheous, he hates banks, I make money with them.

    I'd rather have the option to deal with a private bank and receive a line of credit, than be forced to deal with the Government.
    you're rambling

    YDo you want to get your mortgage from the Government?
    Don't have to. But the guaranteed rate for first time buyers is a terrific financial incentive. BTW, what does that have to do with the OP?

    Do you want the Government to own your house, your car, etc?
    If they want to buy it they can.

    Banks lend money, and they stay in business by being paid extra upon return.
    No one said anything different.
     

    CountryBoy19

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    All the responsible customers will leave in droves.
    No. The responsible people don't burn cash paying interest to someone else.

    The banks will be left with only the debtors and will suffer.

    So what?
    So are you saying that people that have a credit card are irresponsible? I'm confused by what you're actually trying to say here. He said that the responsible people (aka those that pay their card off every month, therefore not paying ANY interest) will leave in droves because they're now being charged money to have their card.

    To be honest, I think many responsible people have CCs because it is a great way to buy online or over the phone, and you don't have to pay anything until later. And if you pay it off monthly there is NO interest, at all.
     

    6birds

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    So are you saying that people that have a credit card are irresponsible? I'm confused by what you're actually trying to say here. He said that the responsible people (aka those that pay their card off every month, therefore not paying ANY interest) will leave in droves because they're now being charged money to have their card.

    To be honest, I think many responsible people have CCs because it is a great way to buy online or over the phone, and you don't have to pay anything until later. And if you pay it off monthly there is NO interest, at all.

    I'm glad you replied, my response wasn't clear.

    I think he is over-estimating what the impact will be, please allow me to explain.

    If you have a CC (I do) and you vote with your wallet (I do), then kill the card when they roll out the "no spending" fee. Someone in another bank will be smart enough to see the writing on the wall, and either defer the fee or kill the new program.

    It will be what the market wants. If I am the only guy doing it, then my vote (with my wallet) will be so small, I'll have to figure out, once again, how to get aroung it, to eliminate this new fee and interest.

    The banks are targeting people who pay interest, that's what pays the divedends to the shareholders (me), so life will not come to an end as Rambone sees it. He may be reacting bad to a flu shot, I'm trying to give him the benefit of the doubt here.
     

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