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pow

posted on 17th Oct 07 at 20:38

Waiting for my Nationwide one to arrive :cool:


Bram

posted on 17th Oct 07 at 18:46

I've just finished the first month of my first card with capital one.

Its a special card to improve your credit rating, use your card and pay off your bill in your first 4 statements and they'll up your credit limit straight away!

Going to do this then look at a cashback card :thumbs:


dannymccann

posted on 17th Oct 07 at 13:56

Im interested in these cahs back cards. im a 2nd year student and have had my student CC for nearly a year and use it as much as i can, paying full balance by DD at the end of every month. few months ago i tried to apply for a cashback card (from egg i think) and they rejected it, obviously leaving some sort of black mark on my record somewhere. just wondering whether it would be stupid to try and apply for the capital one card in my situation?


John

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:50

Did you have the particular money back card we are talking about at the moment, again, go and read all about it on MSE.


Jambo

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:34

quote:
Originally posted by John
If you haven't had a card before I wouldn't apply for the Capital one card as they are very harsh and will most likely reject it.


EH?! They are famous in this country for doing card that people with low credit history can get....

I got my capital one card when i was 18 and i had poooooooor credit.

Reccomend them tbh good customer service. Intrest is high though


Kyle T

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:30

I've never had a credit card before, a loan, or anything - yet noone at all will touch me.

Halifax (my own bank) said my credit rating sucks too much.

Only thing i've had go against me are stupid instances of being overdrawn by £2 and getting stung by a bank charge.

Its pissing me off, as apparently - the more I apply and get rejected, the worse my rating gets :(


John

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:25

Did you get that specific card?

They will give you otehr cards no problem but not that specific one, my information is from MSE.

Cashback is better than an interest free overdraft :boggle:


ssj_kakarot

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:20

why dont you just see if your bank with give you a intrest free overdraft?


ssj_kakarot

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 10:19

quote:
Originally posted by John
If you haven't had a card before I wouldn't apply for the Capital one card as they are very harsh and will most likely reject it.


i got one off them when i was a student and it was my first card, dont think there hard they just put a £500 limit on at the start.



[Edited on 11-10-2007 by ssj_kakarot]


pow

posted on 11th Oct 07 at 07:37

So as long as its paid off in time, I wont have to pay any interest?

Dad said to me last night, keep all of the cheques that work "reimburse" me with, then take themm all in with the bill :)


Andrew

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 19:09

I got some credit card cheques where i don't pay any intrest for 9 months per cheque. It's per cheque, so 9 months intrest free on each cheque. My 6 months intrest free on the card has expired but i bank with Lloyds TSB and really happy with the service they provide so cba changing.

I use the credit card when i'm short per month. Then pay it off when i get paid. Things like getting stung by a bill unexpected. That way i don't pay overdraft fees or intrest on the credit card. It really is about managing finances to your best imo.


pow

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 13:29

Gunna go see my friend in Nationwide :!


willay

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 13:26

applying to capital one


John

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 13:05

Any card you get just set a DD up to pay off every month in full.

Never have the interest problem.


pow

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 13:01

This is what I thought, start building a credi history, plus have an emergency card for uni next year.

I need to make sure im not paying the % extra on purchases though, like in 6 months time when the offer runs out, I dont have to pay 6% on every purchase, even though im cashing in cheques 10 days after ive paid for it :)


John

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 12:56

If you pay off every month in full then yes.
You quite simply earn cashback on purchases.
Think the capital one card is 4% for the 1st 3 months then 1% after that, egg money is a flat 1%.

It's not loads of money but its certainly better than none.

http://www.moneysavingexpert.com


willay

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 12:54

talk to me about this cash back thing, what is it exactly? should I be using one? :look:


John

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 12:43

If you haven't had a card before I wouldn't apply for the Capital one card as they are very harsh and will most likely reject it.


Conway563

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 12:33

If you're going to be doing it the way willay does then it would be a good idea to have a look at a cashback credit card. You don't get any 0% offers but if you're paying it all off it doesn't really matter.
Capital One are doing 4% cashack for the first 3 months


willay

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 11:58

credit cards work like this.

You run up a bill in 30 days, a statement is issued then you have x amount of days (normally another 30 days?...) to pay it back. Within that x amount of days you must pay back either the min amount or more.

Every month I get my statement, I pay it off immediately.

Its good to use on purchases you KNOW you can pay off because it helps you build a good credit history.

Like me, I've never had a credit card until this year, I now use it for petrol (which I can always afford) and my travel expenses which get refunded back to me through work.

[Edited on 10-10-2007 by willay]


pow

posted on 10th Oct 07 at 11:48

I buy alot of things for work out of my own pocket and then get paid back in cheques later on in the day/week etc.

Someone has suggested that I get a credit card and use that to buy things, then when I get the cheques back pay the cheques into the credit card account.

I have a cheque within a week normally, so they will be cleared within 12 days say.

Will I get stung by credit card charges (% on purchases?) or not? Like when the "honeymoon period" runs out?

Cheers :wave: