Did you know the credit card companies’ rules are changing?

Credit card companies have always had tricks for capturing fees and extra interest from the unknowing card user. Recently, legislation was passed on how credit card companies handle the hikes in interest rates and fees. Much to the credit card industries dissatisfaction, big changes are coming!

Let’s take a look at how these can effect you.

Credit card companies will now have to give cardholders forty-five days notice before their interest rates are raised. What does this mean? Well, those days of opening your statement and seeing interest rates jacked up 5 or 10 or 15% and more because of you being one day late are over! Now, if there is a rate hike you’ll have time to pay off or transfer the balance to another card before getting cracked on the wrist, or rather dinged in the wallet, for being late. 

Banks are now required to mail your credit card statements no later than twenty-one days before they are due. In the past, some credit cards standard operating procedure was to send their statements just a few days before they were due. Why? It’s all about money! A late charge here or a late charge there throughout the year, and you’ve added an extra $100 or $200 to the credit card companies coffers. Multiply that, by a few million cardholders and suddenly late charges are an income on their profit and loss statement that will make your head spin!

These same credit card companies try and tell you that this is not their intent. Believe me, this 21 day change alone will cost them millions in unjust charges and save you perhaps hundreds of dollars a year just because they give you ample time to mail your payment in.

Speaking of late fees, if you get your payments in by 5PM on the due date you will no longer incur a late charge. This eliminates that 12:01 AM deadline joke! This is something I never understood. Why have a deadline, of let’s say the 25th of the month at 12:01 AM? If you want it in at midnight then just say the deadline is the 24th. In addition, if the deadline falls on a holiday or a Sunday when the bank is closed the new law allows your payment to be processed the following day without incurring a late charge.

Another big change in the new law is to credit your payments to the balance with the highest interest rate rather than the balance with lower interest rate. In the past it was common practice if you owed say $5000 of which $2500 were misc charges at 8% and another $2500 was cash advance at 18%, to post your payment to the balance at 8% interest. This would mean your overall balance would be charged at the higher rate, thus it became much more difficult to pay off.

In addition, on cash advances the banks require your explicit permission in order to go over your providian automatic credit limit increase. This means no more check postings that you would be hit for an “over credit limit” charge which could also trigger a hike in the interest rate.

Overall, these changes will make it harder for the credit card companies to hold you in financial bondage by hindering your ability to pay off your accrued debts.  Keep in mind that this doesn’t mean you’re in the clear. You still need to be a good money steward, staying within your budget and making your payments in a timely manner. 

Be bold!

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