English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Isn't this considered'double dipping'? Why is this allowed? Who made up the rule they could do this? How can we ever get our card paid off when most of our payment goes towards the finance charges?

2006-12-31 04:46:21 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Credit

8 answers

They are allowed to because they are in the businesses of making money. Creditors reside in certain states because the laws that govern those states are all different, when it comes to regulating fees. There is a saying in this industry " creditors give their clients just enough financial rope to hang themselves" Actually credit cards were not designed to pay off every month. If everyone paid their debt off monthly the creditor would make no money. Your creditors will be as happy as can be if you continue to pay your minimum payment and not a penny more for the next 20 years!
Kourtnie Donihoo
Debt Analyst
The E.D.A. Group

2006-12-31 04:57:55 · answer #1 · answered by Kourtnie D 4 · 0 2

This may be confusing but the finance charge is the percentage your referring too. To explain this better, your monthly finance charge is based on an Annual Percentage Rate. Divide the APR by 12 and you will determine what your monthly percentage rate is and if you multiply your current balance owed on your card you will be able to pre determine what finance charge you will receive on your next statement.

Example: 12.00% APR = 1.00% a month. If your balance is $4,000.00 your finance charge will be $40. If you only pay the $40 finance charge nothing will be applied to the balance and you will never pay off your card.

Hope that helps.

2006-12-31 07:33:37 · answer #2 · answered by hoss_994 2 · 1 2

That's the racket of credit cards issuers...
Lure you in with low interest rates, but when you miss a payment, they jack it up.

To pay off a credit card, you have to pay more than the minimum payment. That's another gimmick the card issuers have... pay a little which is mainly interest payments and you'll be stuck with that debt for years.

Legally they have charges for loaning you the money, an interest payment... and they have finance charges for administering your account or for missing a payment or some other weaselly excuse.

2006-12-31 04:55:31 · answer #3 · answered by Dave C 7 · 0 2

we are going to see - in the present day I paid off Chase with the aid of fact they wanted to bump me from a loan "assure" of three.9% on their cc to 17.4% - with the purpose to heck with them, in the mail the day before in the present day got here my Capital one card - same tale yet that they had the nerve to question me for 23% - - - properly as my mom in no way had any stupid toddlers, i'll be paying off Capital one with my next earnings examine. How stupid do they think of we are? (it extremely is a rhetorical question)! CJ

2016-10-06 06:25:06 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's called "legalized loan-sharking". If you only pay the minimums every month, then it will take nearly 30 years to pay off your balance in full.

2006-12-31 04:53:45 · answer #5 · answered by Gary D 7 · 0 1

That is their whole business, don't forget the hidden charges !

2006-12-31 04:54:23 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

There isn't nothing you can do about , you assigned a contract with them.

2006-12-31 07:03:30 · answer #7 · answered by Iton S 2 · 0 2

It is not fair. How can you stop them from doing this?

2006-12-31 04:54:12 · answer #8 · answered by amateur_mathemagician 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers