Questions tagged [credit-card]

Credit cards are unstructured debt accounts linked to a plastic card that allows the holder to make purchases from retailers that accept the card. Common credit card networks in the U.S. include Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express.

A credit card is a form of unstructured, short-term debt available to individuals and corporate entities, allowing for the "cardholder" to make retail purchases and other payments without requiring the use of cash or checks, which present risk to one or both parties to the transaction.

The idea was first popularized by the Diner's Club card, launched in 1950 to provide an easy-to-use alternative to then-traditional "letters of credit". These letters were issued by a bank, and identified the holder as "credit-worthy", allowing the holder to present them at another bank or financial institution to obtain cash. These letters had several issues regarding trust and proof of identity, and generally were only presentable at banks with a pre-existing relationship with the bank issuing the letter. These problems were initially solved by the American Express Company with its popular "Traveler's Checks"; Diner's Club took the idea a step further by requiring the holder to carry only a small durable card, instead of the paper checks. American Express soon followed with its now-ubiquitous charge card brand, followed in turn by Bank of America which released its BankAmericard, which would eventually become Visa.

The modern credit card in the United States is a durable plastic card with the name of the "cardholder" to whom it is issued, the card's unique number, and certain other identifying information imprinted on it. Most also have a magnetic stripe which contains the same information in a form easily available to computerized card reader systems. This card is linked by its number to a debt account held by a bank. Other systems used in Europe and Asia, such as "smart card" technologies, allow the card to hold more data, and also allow for "multi-factor" authentication by encrypting the card's digital contents, requiring a "PIN code" committed to the cardholder's memory in order to obtain the card data using a reader.

Most credit cards are accepted by retailers that subscribe to that card's "network". Each major card type has its own network, allowing a large "many-to-many" relationship between the banks issuing cards to cardholders and the banks of merchants accepting the cards for payment. Current major U.S. credit card networks include Visa and MasterCard, which were formed by alliances of multiple member banks and comprise the overwhelming majority of bank-issued credit cards, and American Express and Discover, which were formed and are managed by single financial institutions. A retailer's bank will usually allow electronic deposits of funds from any card network, even if that bank only issues cards on one network.

When the card is swiped, the cardholder is implicitly agreeing to pay the issuing bank for the amount of the purchase; the issuing bank is, in turn, promising to "front" the money to the retailer on behalf of the cardholder. The borrower is usually given a 30-day "grace period" during which there is no interest charged, allowing the holder to use it as a form of "grace card". After this time has elapsed, any balance remaining on the card is charged an interest rate, usually between 8 and 18% for borrowers in good standing, but considerably higher for cardholders who are behind on payments or who have made other mistakes with credit.

In recent years, credit card networks such as Visa and MasterCard have begun marketing "debit cards". These are a combination of credit card and ATM card, and instead of being tied to a debt account, they are linked to the cardholder's checking account. They provide much the same protections from fraud and theft as a traditional credit card, and can be used anywhere that the credit card is accepted, but because there is no debt involved, the costs to the cardholder of using a debit card are typically small or nonexistent.

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Should I use a zero-interest credit card for a large one-time purchase?

An upcoming purchase (nearing $10,000, in the US) would drain savings more than I'd be comfortable with, and I'm wondering if using a zero-interest card to effectively spread out that purchase for 15-20 months would be sensible. This is for a…
StayOnTarget
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Why auto-renew instead of canceling the subscription after free-trial?

Almost all companies give you a 7/14/30 day free trial to try their service (eg: Netflix, Spotify). Some people forget to cancel the subscription and after the free trial expires, these companies begin charging instead of asking if you would…
Yami Odymel
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What are the reasons to get more than one credit card?

I currently have one credit card, and I was thinking of applying for another one since my current card is Amex, and not many stores support that, so I'm thinking of getting a Visa or Mastercard one. Aside from the said reason, what other benefits or…
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What do the numbers on my credit/debit card mean?

I have the following visa card from comdirect.de: I guess: Number A is my credit card number. The 4 groups don't have a meaning. Number B: I have no idea. Might be my security code? Number C is my security code. Number D is eventually a card code…
Martin Thoma
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Credit card number masking - good practices, rules, law regulations?

Usually when I enter and save my credit card number in online shop or mobile app, only last four numbers are shown as a reminder. Example (not actual digits): Your card: **** **** **** 1234 Recently I used an app, where card number was shown as…
tomash
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Ticketed event after card number has changed

I've had credit cards that had numbers changed due to the store-wide hacks we've all heard about. Usually, the impact is that I need to update my auto-payments to the few I have on file. I purchased tickets to an event, months ago, for a September…
JTP - Apologise to Monica
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How should I handle a purchase when the credit-card reader is dead?

Scenario I'm in a restaurant. I finish my meal. I go to pay with a credit card and I'm informed that the card reader is not working - can I pay with cash? I don't carry cash. There's no nearby ATM. So I let them write down my card number, and my…
gef05
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Which credit card is friendliest to merchants?

I'm not interested in debit cards; I want the security that credit cards provide if a naughty hacker steals my credit card number. Which credit cards do merchants prefer to take? In other words, which ones have the lowest rate the merchant is…
Colen
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Can I increase my credit limit by transferring money to my Credit Card account?

I have a credit card with a credit limit of $1000, but I would like to make a purchase of $1500. If I transfer $500 into my credit card account, would that increase my credit limit to $1500?
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Is there any reason to not pay credit card charges immediately?

I'm in the habit of paying off my credit card balance immediately - as in, after I make a purchase and as soon as it appears on my bank account, I pay it off before I even get a statement. I've never ran into any interest this way - but I've been…
Zibbobz
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Why ask for Credit Card type?

Why do online retailers ask for the type of card before you enter the number? This information is coded into the card number itself, so it is redundant. For example, any card that starts with a 4 is a Visa. 51 through 55 is MasterCard 34 or 37 is…
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Should I go further to confirm that my credit card is closed?

Today I called my credit card provider to cancel a card with a high annual fee that I could no longer justify. After just a couple of minutes the representative closed the account, and confirmed the balance was $0.00. Thirty minutes later I called…
tpm900
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What's wrong with store credit cards?

In How do credit card balances relate to getting a Mortgage? several people seem to assume that store-based credit cards are a bad idea. What is the reason for that? Is there something about them that I'm missing? ~~EDIT~~ A little background. We…
David Oneill
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How much savings should you keep before paying off credit card debt?

Is there a rule of thumb or basic idea as to how much savings I should keep regardless of credit card debt? Right now I have about 5k of CC debt at 17% and 5k in savings....seems like a no brainer right? But at the same time I feel like I would be…
GBa
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How can I pay off a charge on my credit card over several months without paying interest?

In this answer, RonJohn describes a method of paying off credit card debt in such a way that large balances can be carried over from month to month without incurring interest. I don't follow the argument in the answer, and the comment thread is now…
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