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2 answers

I work for a company dealing with business credit card accounts. If the business is the card holder and an employee is issued a card for use the business still maintains the responsibility of paying for the purchases. If they are not paid for they are a liability to the business not the employee. In my experience, the only way an employee could be held responsibile is if they personally guaranteed the account (cosigner for the business) or if they use the card for non-business related purchases (in which case legal action by the business would be taken).

If the employee did not personally sign for the account then they would have nothing to worry about.

2007-12-06 13:00:06 · answer #1 · answered by Meg 1 · 0 0

No. If that were true, it would be like you using someone's credit card with their permission to buy yourself something and then having your credit damaged because they didn't pay the bill. Don't worry, it's not gonna happen. The worst that could happen is your card won't be accepted anymore.

2007-12-06 21:01:01 · answer #2 · answered by curtisports2 7 · 0 0

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