|
Credit Card Transfers
Credit Card Balance Transfers

by Scott Bilker
Scott,
A friend told me that they heard that continually doing balance
transfers from one credit card to another can negatively affect my
credit rating and that they also heard that there is a limit to how many
balance transfers I can do. However, they did not know what that limit
is. I've read in at least one of your books that you are constantly
doing balance transfers to whatever is the best offer available at the
time. Is there a limit on how many balance transfers I can do in a year,
or even my lifetime? Do specific credit card companies have their own
limits? Will the balance transfers hurt my credit rating if I am paying
down my credit cards and even paying off others during this process?
--Amy
Amy,
Great question!
I would have the worst credit rating on
earth and also have run out of my limit of balance transfers if what you
heard was true! Actually, one could argue that the exact opposite is the
case which is, the more balance transfers you do, the more active you
look on your credit report, and the more banks will attempt to get you
to transfer your balances to them!
Actually, the more I transfer my
balances, the more direct mail I receive from banks asking me to
transfer my balances. And when I do transfer my balance from card "A" to
card "B," within two weeks I receive a new transfer offer from "A"
asking me to come back!
As far as limits are concerned, you'll
only be limited by the market, i.e., by the credit offers that are
available to you personally. If banks want your business, they'll need
to come up with a good offer. That's how you have to think of it. It's
possible that certain companies may have some policy about transfer
limits, but I've never heard of such a limit. Based on my daily
snail-mail, I doubt there is any limit.
The only possible time that you could
have any trouble with doing balance transfers and your credit report is
when you're opening new lines of credit to do those transfers and
simultaneously applying for another loan, like a mortgage. The mortgage
bank may not like seeing all your open lines of credit because, from
their perspective, you are risky since you could possibly get into
trouble if you spend that available credit. But here too can be many
exceptions.
For example, when I purchased my house I
had $24,000 in credit card debt on about 24 credit cards and the bank
approved the mortgage without a single question because I have never
been late paying on any account.
The biggest mistake you can ever make is
being late. Once you start to pay late, that's when you'll have problems
with transfer options and interest rates and everything to do with your
financial life.
Hope that answers your question.
Regards,
Scott
Scott Bilker is the author of the
best-selling books, "Talk Your Way Out of
Credit Card Debt", "Credit Card and Debt Management", and "How to be
more Credit
Card and Debt Smart". He is also the Editor and publisher of the FREE
DebtSmart®
E-mail Newsletter (http://www.debtsmart.com).
Sign up today!
Credit Card Offers
Easy
Loans
Other Loan Information
Unsecured Personal Loans
-The Easy Kind of Financing
No Hassle
Unsecured Loan
No Collateral Business Financing
The Three Largest Factors In Your
Interest Rate
Loans and Credit Cards
Privacy Policy Statement
|