Another bit of advice Green offers is to note how close you are to the credit limit on any of your cards. If you’re near the limit, that is a black mark against you in a lender’s eyes – the ideal is to have a balance of less than 30 percent of your credit limit. If you can’t pay down the limit, Green suggests asking the credit card issuer to up your card’s limit to get it below that 30 percent threshold. Paying close to attention to credit scoring details, insists Green, can up your score by 100 points in no time.
Category: Best Low Fee Prepaid Cards
Millions of people are turning to prepaid debit cards as a smart alternative to carrying cash and writing checks. Almost anyone can qualify and they don’t require a credit check or a bank account. Though they carry credit card logos and can be used anywhere a credit card is used, unlike a credit card, they do not offer a line of credit. The user can only spend the amount that has been loaded onto the card or placed into the account associated with the card.
There are dozens of debit cards on the market, many of them issued by the same bank, but fee structures are vastly different. Bestprepaiddebitcards.com has done all the research for you and provides comprehensive reviews to help you decide which card is best for you.
Turning Student Debt Into Good Credit
There are times when even the most well-meaning and responsible graduate just can’t make those loan repayments. When that is the case, Raghavan writes that the best approach is to defer the loans. Defaulting on the debt will do lasting harm to your credit score. “As a good rule of thumb, remember that it’s OK to defer, but not to default,” she writes.
IRS Rule Change Targets Identity Thieves
The new procedures will go into effect in January of 2015 and are meant to make it more difficult for criminals to steal taxpayer identities and hijack their deposits. Currently, an identity thief or unscrupulous accountant could set up an account or obtain a prepaid debit card into which they could funnel multiple tax refunds.
A Wave of Debit Card Fraud
It’s the sort of call that is becoming unnervingly common these days. Police in the city of Gilbert, Arizona near Phoenix, recently warned that criminals impersonating law enforcement officers were phoning residents and threatening them with arrest unless they pay outstanding traffic tickets. The way to pay the fictitious tickets? By handing over credit card… Continue reading A Wave of Debit Card Fraud
Prepaid Debit Cards that Allow you to Pay Bills (Like a Checking Account)
Prepaid Debit Cards that Allow you to Pay Bills It’s an irresistible headline. “Why a guy making $100,000 a year can’t get a bank account,” was the provocative title to a recent intriguing story by Danielle Douglas in The Washington Post. In it, Douglas describes how a Kansas City software engineer, Zikomo Fields, pulls in… Continue reading Prepaid Debit Cards that Allow you to Pay Bills (Like a Checking Account)
Suze Orman Prepaid Card Discontinued June 30
That’s because Orman’s Approved Card, a partnership with Bancorp Bank that was released in early 2012, is suspending operations on July 1. According to a story in The New York Times, holders of the Approved Card recently received a letter from Bancorp Bank urging them to spend whatever money remained in their accounts – anything not spent would be refunded to them.