Credit cards

I was dumb and ran up a bunch of credit card debt 20 years ago. Cut them up and paid them off. I was pissed. Only had a debit card for 10ish years. Used it for everything. My banker was pissed! Told me I had zero fraud protection and needed a small credit card to use while I traveled. A little older and wiser I carry 3 cards now. Never carry a balance. 2 are cash back cards that offer different promotions. 1 is a southwest card so I can fly to AZ to visit the parents for free in the winter. Discipline has got us some pretty good perks. I only use my debit card at my banks ATM to keep it active.
Your banker lies but that's what banks do. The banks are bound by Regulation E. Your liability for fraud is capped at $50 if I remember correctly, as long as you report the fraud in a timely manner. I believe that it's 60 days from you statement issuance date.
 
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I have a Fidelity branded visa that gives me 2% back on everything and the rewards cash is deposited directly into my IRA brokerage account.
 
Another vote here for Southwest coupled with companion pass, and paying balance off monthly. We've had four round trip flights this Summer, and one to Costa Rica in November, and our kids fly for just the $5 in taxes and fees on each of those.
If anyone is interested in referrals for that, they are sending out promo codes all the time, message me and I'll share one.
Southwest is also sending us more free drink coupons for flights than we can even use right now...
 
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We got the Capital One Venture after getting married when we did a bunch of overseas travelling.

But now with kids we barely leave the county and I have millions of 'miles' built up.

I've never wanted multiple cards, but I think I'm going to go down that route next.
 
The Amazon one is one I think we should look into. Besides the Fareway and the hardware store, we buy most everything else on Amazon.

We make most purchases on the Mastercard account that came with my college checking account over 40 years ago. Since it is same bank as our checking account, we set it up to pay full amount of last statement from checking. We also have an Amex green card we use for large purchases that we want to move money around to pay off.

I am just relieved I have convinced all of my sons to finally quit using the debit for things like gas, although some places the technology has improved on preventing card information from being stolen. The son in FL had a streak of four times in six months getting someone using his Visa info but that’s pretty easy to fix and the card company caught it quick each time.
Saw that they're paying $200 for getting an Amazon card today. Maybe they do that anyway, though.
 
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Capital One - Rarely use it and I couldn't even tell you what kind it is.
Citi Double Cash - Probably my primary card but need to reexamine as they changed things and I haven't properly re-evaluated it's current value.
Citi Premier - Business for specific purposes
Chase SW Rewards (personal and business which both dump points into my account) - I make sure I obtain the companion pass then use other cards as they often have better returns. But if you travel a lot (with a GF or spouse) the companion pass can be worht thousands a year.
Amex Blue - Rarely use.
Amex Gold (business) - Primary business card.
Amex Plum (business)
 
This will go over well with the Dave Ramsey folks on the site….

Wondering what credit cards people have? Do you get the ones that rack up miles? Do you get the ones with a percent kick back or discounts or what do you have?

My wife and I have loosely done the Dave Ramsey thing and are fairly conservative with our spending but have been thinking of getting a percentage kick back on things that we use our debit cards for.

Any input/feedback would be appreciated!
I pretty much use my quicksilver card for any normal every day purchases.
 
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Main ones are 2 Chase Freedom Cards - the freedom unlimited card that gets 1.5% cash back and the regular Freedom card that gets 1% cash back along with some rotating quarterly 5% cash back categories. I have a bunch of store cards I opened at some point to get interest free financing on a purchase or a discount but the only one I use regularly is the Menards card.
 
We have the regular Chase Freedom, 1% cash back on all purchases and 5% back on quarterly rotating categories.
 
I keep it simple and just use my wells Fargo cash back (2% on all purchases) and pay on the same day each month. A random perk of it is cell phone coverage and twice I've used that to replace broken phones .
 
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I use credit cards in this order:

Discover and Chase Freedom: Use for whatever the 5% cash back rotating category is of each
American Express Blue: Groceries (6% CB) and gas (3% CB) if gas is not on one of the cards above.
Travel: Chase Sapphire Preferred (2% CB) and bonus redemption when used to book travel on their portal
Everything else: Citi Double cash (2% CB)

This may be overkill for most people but I treat it like a game and put some money back in our pocket. As others have said, if you aren't paying your balance off for every card, every month this is NOT worth it. The credit card companies feast on the % of cardholders who do not pay their balance so they collect 12-22% in interest.
 
I use credit cards in this order:

Discover and Chase Freedom: Use for whatever the 5% cash back rotating category is of each
American Express Blue: Groceries (6% CB) and gas (3% CB) if gas is not on one of the cards above.
Travel: Chase Sapphire Preferred (2% CB) and bonus redemption when used to book travel on their portal
Everything else: Citi Double cash (2% CB)

This may be overkill for most people but I treat it like a game and put some money back in our pocket. As others have said, if you aren't paying your balance off for every card, every month this is NOT worth it. The credit card companies feast on the % of cardholders who do not pay their balance so they collect 12-22% in interest.
Actually credit card companies hate the balance people. While 15-24% sounds great, they make way more from the 1.5-3.0% transaction fee from those who charge a lot and pay it off monthly. Those who carry a balance eat up their charging capacity. Their favorite people are the ones who max it out monthly and pay it off monthly.
 
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I use credit cards in this order:

Discover and Chase Freedom: Use for whatever the 5% cash back rotating category is of each
American Express Blue: Groceries (6% CB) and gas (3% CB) if gas is not on one of the cards above.
Travel: Chase Sapphire Preferred (2% CB) and bonus redemption when used to book travel on their portal
Everything else: Citi Double cash (2% CB)

This may be overkill for most people but I treat it like a game and put some money back in our pocket. As others have said, if you aren't paying your balance off for every card, every month this is NOT worth it. The credit card companies feast on the % of cardholders who do not pay their balance so they collect 12-22% in interest.

Balance due or full amount?

With my bank I can do automated payments and trying to decide which one to set it at.

I typically don't use a credit card as I don't do much flying, eating out, etc. but this thread has me rethinking things.

Not gonna go crazy but looking at a Costco one since I do shop there fairly regularly.
 
Balance due or full amount?

With my bank I can do automated payments and trying to decide which one to set it at.

I typically don't use a credit card as I don't do much flying, eating out, etc. but this thread has me rethinking things.

Not gonna go crazy but looking at a Costco one since I do shop there fairly regularly.
Do full amount, what I have decided to do over the next couple months. (smooth out the hit). Balance due always gives you one month sitting there. As anal retentive I can be about financial things, that is even one thing I never really thought about.
 
Do full amount, what I have decided to do over the next couple months. (smooth out the hit). Balance due always gives you one month sitting there. As anal retentive I can be about financial things, that is even one thing I never really thought about.

That's what I'm thinking...just wondering if just doing what's due is fine for credit score, etc.

(of course I'm sure a simple google search covers this)
 
We have a Discover card with cash back that is the same account but our card numbers are different, so we can cancel one while still being able to use the other one. Unfortunately Discover is not as widely accepted out of the USA as MC/VISA.
Consequently, we looked at MC/VISA miles cards and cash back cards and decided that the cash backs were far more flexible. We have several cards due to travel. Two of them have no "international spending" fees, but also don't have cash back. We each carry one of those on our travels outside the country so that we don't have to pay extra for the privilege of spending our money in foreign lands on meals & souvenirs. Those "exchange" fees are different from the exchange rates; it's a percentage of the purchase price, and that extra fee added on to the purchase totally cancels out any cash back from the purchase..

We learned the hard way that if your pocket is picked it's a real ***** if you have the same cards in your wallets, so by carrying a Discover and one of the two other cards each, we're pretty well covered. We have an MC/VISA type cash back card that stays a the safe in the hotel or onboard the ship (depending on mode of travel) that is for emergencies (unexpected illness, flight issues, etc.). All are paid off in full monthly.

Fun fact for the younger ones among you: That Discover card was the first card I ever got under my own name and income, post divorce in 1993. Women could not get credit cards without their husband's approval when I was in college and a young wife (mid-70s). In fact, we (my ex and I) didn't even HAVE a credit card until I was about 25, and it was in his name (he was 28). It's probably silly, but that Discover card has some special meaning for me.
 
Do full amount, what I have decided to do over the next couple months. (smooth out the hit). Balance due always gives you one month sitting there. As anal retentive I can be about financial things, that is even one thing I never really thought about.
I do the balance due. This is the minimum needed to NOT pay interest. If you do the full balance, you are paying the posted transactions that wouldn't be due until the second payment. This is totally fine but if you have your cash allocated to pay your credit card in a money market account or high yield savings account you are missing out slight interest by paying ahead. Just my 2 cents.
 
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I do the balance due. This is the minimum needed to NOT pay interest. If you do the full balance, you are paying the posted transactions that wouldn't be due until the second payment. This is totally fine but if you have your cash allocated to pay your credit card in a money market account or high yield savings account you are missing out slight interest by paying ahead. Just my 2 cents.
I know, but the 3000 or so will net me about 3-6 dollars over the year now and its kinda nice to just have nothing sitting out there down the road.
 
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