corsasport.co.uk
 

Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » House Day » Paying off a loan » Post Reply

Post Reply
Who Can Post? All users can post new topics and all users can reply.
Icon:
Formatting Mode:
Normal
Advanced
Help

Insert Bold text Insert Italicized text Insert Underlined text Insert Centered text Insert a Hyperlink Insert Email Hyperlink Insert an Image Insert Code Formatted text Insert Quoted text
Message:
HTML is Off
Smilies are On
BB Code is On
[img] Code is On
Post Options: Disable smileys?
Turn BBCode off?
Receive email notification of new replies?

deano87

posted on 16th Sep 08 at 21:27

quote:
Originally posted by Ian W
quote:
Originally posted by Colin
Oh & will I be able to pay off a loan with a credit card?


Ye, just phone up and say you want to settle the loan.

BUT THEN IT WON'T BE A BALANCE TRANSFER. It will be a purchase, so that is something to bare in mind.

http://www.moneysupermarket.co.uk for credit card comparisons. If you're going to pay off the loan company directly with a 0% card, it will need to be purchases it's 0% on, not balance transfers.

No upfront fee (i.e. 3%) for purchases either.


Ian W

posted on 16th Sep 08 at 19:47

quote:
Originally posted by Colin
Oh & will I be able to pay off a loan with a credit card?


Ye, just phone up and say you want to settle the loan.


Colin

posted on 16th Sep 08 at 19:32

Oh & will I be able to pay off a loan with a credit card?


Ian W

posted on 16th Sep 08 at 19:30

quote:
Originally posted by Colin
Ive had a rethink & worked out I could manage to clear it by paying half from cash sat in my current account & half stuck on a 0% card.

So next Q. is whats the best 10-12 month 0% cards on offer?? :look:


I went with Capital One, they only offered me 1k credit limit, waste of time when I put on the form that I had a balance of 1k to transfer on to it :mad:


Colin

posted on 16th Sep 08 at 19:24

Ive had a rethink & worked out I could manage to clear it by paying half from cash sat in my current account & half stuck on a 0% card.

So next Q. is whats the best 10-12 month 0% cards on offer?? :look:


deano87

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 22:20

No, never had any complaints.

Oh yeah, I forgot about the 3% balance transfer fee :|


Twiggy

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 22:02

quote:
Originally posted by deano87
I know the interest rates vary, but I personally don't like the idea of getting in debt for the sake of debt. If I was in your situation, I'd pay off lump sums every month, as you wish. Then if things get tight one month i.e. £600 is taken up with an emergency flat repair, all you have to pay is £160.

Alternatively, what credit cards do you have?

I have a Virgin credit card which does 0% balance transfers (to other credit/store cards AND current accounts).

It's a bit long winded, but if you really wanted to save money:

1) Find a credit card with 0% for at least 6 months (term you need) on balance transfers and hope you get a £3k credit limit.
2) Get your £3k overdraft.
3) Pay off your loan.
4) Pay off your £3k overdraft with credit card, giving you 0% for X months.

If you apply for the 0% card, and don't get a credit limit high enough, you could still do it, or just cut up the credit card and forget you've got it.

I'm a student with £1300 credit limit on the Virgin card, so I'm sure you'd get £3k.



Have you ever called up and moaned? If so i have proberbly spoke to you :lol::lol:

Ohh yeh what Ian said....

On the credit card issue....

Only use if its a long ish term loan (12mths+) ... But if you can pay it off in 5mths it might not be worth it as the balance/money transfer fee is 2.98% = £89.40 which maybe more than the loan/overdraft interest:wave::wave:

[Edited on 15-09-2008 by Twiggy]


Ian

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 20:12

If the loan is 10% APR and overdraft is 19%, keep the loan.


deano87

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 20:02

I know the interest rates vary, but I personally don't like the idea of getting in debt for the sake of debt. If I was in your situation, I'd pay off lump sums every month, as you wish. Then if things get tight one month i.e. £600 is taken up with an emergency flat repair, all you have to pay is £160.

Alternatively, what credit cards do you have?

I have a Virgin credit card which does 0% balance transfers (to other credit/store cards AND current accounts).

It's a bit long winded, but if you really wanted to save money:

1) Find a credit card with 0% for at least 6 months (term you need) on balance transfers and hope you get a £3k credit limit.
2) Get your £3k overdraft.
3) Pay off your loan.
4) Pay off your £3k overdraft with credit card, giving you 0% for X months.

If you apply for the 0% card, and don't get a credit limit high enough, you could still do it, or just cut up the credit card and forget you've got it.

I'm a student with £1300 credit limit on the Virgin card, so I'm sure you'd get £3k.


Tommy L

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 19:42

Yes i think


Colin

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 19:39

So if im 2k overdrawn Id pay £30 a month?


Colin

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 19:39



1.50% a month
Typical (19.5% EAR)

Hmmmmm Im not really disolving that.....does that mean 1.5% interest charged on what I owe paid each month?


Cosmo

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 19:31

Id check what the % is on the overdraft and then make the call.


Colin

posted on 15th Sep 08 at 19:29

I've got a small personal loan I took out to help buy a my car last year, it seemed like the best solution at the time.

I owe approx £3k & 2yrs to pay.

I now want to pay my loan off asap.

I usually have around 500-600 a month left over each month to do whatever with save or spend after bills, so was going to just start making lump payments for the next 6 months or so to pay it off, I can do this as per the t&c of my loan.

I have another option however, this is that according to my online banking (my loans with the bank I use!) Ive got available up to £3k agreed overdraft, I can have no questions asked.

I thought if I took this I could pay off the loan straight away & then pay off my overdraft over the next few months, though with more spare money each month as I wouldnt be paying the £160 of the loan I currently do each month!

Does this sound like a good idea?

My loans 10.9% apr, not sure what i'l be chearged for having sure a large overdraft?? Its with Halifax?

Thanks in advance for any comments!

[Edited on 15-09-2008 by Colin]