Brilliant -- I just got a call on my cell phone from my grandmother's number, but it was my mother on the phone. Luckily, I only had a moment to think my grandmother was dead (as you do), when my mother asked me who Blythe Danner's daughter is -- and then hung right up after I told her! OK then.
Jonathan ,'Lies My Parents Told Me'
Natter 69: Practically names itself.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
a retail credit card (for a specific store) was considered the riskiest and least positive.
Crap, the only card I have is for Target, though I don't carry a balance on it (handy for "we need dinner and payday's in 3 days"). And we have huge medical bills that are being paid at the minimum.
I guess it's time to win the lottery.
Connie, not that it probably matters in your whole scheme of things, but is it a Target Visa card or just a Target card?
Jessica,
Here would be my recommendation:
1) shift the balance if you think it will help you pay down the debt and if you will not be late with payments and will not charge anything on the new card. When I was in a lot of debt in the late 1990s, that's what I fucking had to do to stay afloat. Will you be paying it off ASAP?
2) Do not close the other credit card accounts if you can help it. Especially not the CC you have had the longest. Try not to run up any additional debt.
The agencies like you to have a lot of credit, but only use a small percentage of it. The new card will probably give you a hit on the credit report, but it likely will be negligible if you won't be applying for a mortgage within 2 years.
is it a Target Visa card or just a Target card?
Just a Target card. I should probably see about getting a real card and do small things with it.
If you've had a good record with Target, you may be able to call them and ask them to switch it to the Target Visa.
Remember that most balance transfer offers include a percentage fee, so they're not really zero interest situations (though it can still save you hundreds of dollars in interest compared to a regular credit card balance).
That's the idea. Or at least, shift as much of the balance to the new card as I think I can pay off during the promotional period. Since I assume the interest on a line of credit would be more than 0%, this way is the cheapest.
I would recommend doing it sooner than later. Recent credit applications are a fairly big hit.
I should probably see about getting a real card and do small things with it.
I put everything on my credit card but I enter the transactions into my check register as if they were cash/debit, so I know I have the money to cover it.
I put everything on my credit card but I enter the transactions into my check register as if they were cash/debit, so I know I have the money to cover it.
That's my approximate modus operandi. I still use my debit card from time to time so I don't have some sort of attack when the credit card bill comes, but I get reward points, so I figure I might as well generate them.
I have a question spurred by a story I just read--how old is old enough to leave sitting in a bath by themselves while you answer the door, presumably out of really easy earshot?