Getting the credit you need can be easier than maintaining it. In fact, there’s probably not a week that goes by that you do not receive a credit card offer in the mail. Like the ones offered on my EcreditDirectory site, there are even more credit card offers online. Stores - both in the mall and on the Internet - are quick to give you an immediate discount on your purchase if you sign up for their credit card. While that extra ten percent off is tempting, before you realize it you have another credit card payment to make each month.
The problem with credit cards is that it does not seem like real money. You do not feel those dollars leaving your wallet, so it is easy to underestimate the impact of a swipe here and a swipe there.
Credit cards were never meant to be a substitute for budgeting. No matter how easy it was to spend the money, each month there is a day of reckoning on the payment due date. Making the minimum payment will keep you from getting late fees, but look at your balance.
If you did not charge another nickel, how long would it take to pay off the balance? That is the question you need to ask yourself. Don’t make the mistake of getting a second, third or fourth credit card just to transfer the balances.
Balance transfer is a great way to move higher interest debt to a lower interest card. It is not meant to shuffle money like a shell game. Most Americans have more credit cards than they need.
Since the major cards are accepted practically everywhere, you only need one or two credit cards. It is easier to keep track of the balances on one or two cards than on six or eight credit cards, which many people carry.
Cash advances are like getting a loan on demand. The problem is, it is the most expensive loan you can get. The easy access to cash from ATMs makes it simple to get ten bucks for lunch, fifty bucks for shopping and twenty-five bucks for movie tickets for you and your spouse.
That’s $85 in one day. Repeat this once a week and your debt will skyrocket in a few months. The price for your easy access cash can be at the credit card rates of 24 percent and upwards. The rewards and bonuses sound tempting, but you may find that getting a credit card with a better APR (annual percentage rate) and no annual fee is worth more in the long run than the freebies that you might not use even if you earned them.
Using credit cards is the way to establish a good credit history. The problem is that misuse of credit cards destroys your credit rating. When you need to buy a car or want to purchase a home, that credit rating suddenly becomes very important.
Every careless shopping spree, every cash advance, every late payment - is factored into that credit rating. If you’re going to use credit cards, treat it like cash and only charge what you can afford to pay. Otherwise, you cheat yourself out of the credit rating you need in the future for really important purchases.
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Contributor's Note
Good credit, bad credit, no credit -- you deserve the best options available. Visit www.mykidsinheritance.ecreditdirectory.com for more information.
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