| 12 questions to ask about balance transfers |
| By Erin
Peterson Bankrate.com |
|
Those low-interest, credit card-balance-transfer offers showing
up in your mailbox almost daily -- some going as low as zero-percent
-- are hard to resist. But read before you leap. The fine print,
that is. You could end up paying more than you would have if you'd
just stayed put.
That's not to say transferring
balances is a bad thing. It's just that you should understand exactly
what you're doing and figure out whether it's really good for you.
Here are 12 key questions to ask
before you make the decision.
1. How
long does the rate last? Typically, introductory rates last
six months, and occasionally a year. Some last for the life of the
transfer. So make sure you know how you intend to pay off your transferred
debt. If you can pay it off during that interest payment holiday
or super-teaser rate it might be a good deal. If not, think twice.
If you know you cannot pay it off within that time frame, sit down
with a calculator and work on different scenarios. You might find
that if you haven't paid off enough of the transferred balance in,
say a year, you're actually moving into a worse deal.
2. What
are the minimum requirements to keep the low rate? Even a
zero-percent rate comes with a price, says Gerri Detweiler, founder
of Ultimate
Credit Solutions. "Some cards may require you to make a
purchase every month to keep the zero-percent rate," Detweiler
says. You'll probably also have to pay your monthly bills on time
every month -- and some might even require that you pay all your
other bills on time, too. Be wary of broad default clauses that
give the credit card companies the option of raising
your rate at their discretion. "It's okay if the default
clause lets them raise the rate if you make a late payment more
than twice in six months," says Detweiler. "But I'd steer
clear of cards that say they can raise your rate if they determine,
in their interest, that your account carries risk."
3. What's
the interest rate for new purchases? It might be the same
low rate as the transfer, but don't count on it. If the rate is
higher, you may also find yourself in for a shock when you begin
to make payments. Any payments you make are typically applied to
the lowest-rate items, which is exactly the opposite of what you'd
normally want to do to get out of debt, says Patricia Hasson, president
of the Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Delaware Valley. "If
you transfer a balance to a new card, it should be a card you don't
plan to use," she says.
4. Is there
a balance-transfer fee? Typically, cards
charge about 3 percent of the transfer, up to $50 or $75. "Add
that into the interest rate you're getting to see if it will correlate
into savings over time," says Hasson.
5. How is
the average balance on the account calculated? Some
companies use a two-month moving average, which tends to be detrimental
to customers carrying a balance. Try to find a card that uses an average
daily balance. Two-cycle billing means the interest for the
current billing cycle is computed using the average daily balance
over the last two billing periods, the current period and the previous
period. If you carry a balance this usually means you will lose
the grace period on your new purchases.
6. What
will the rate be when it finally changes? Though you might
not be able to know that rate with complete accuracy, see if you
can get a ballpark figure, says Catherine Williams, vice president
of financial literacy for Money Management International. "When
you're dealing with balance transfers, you're really gambling,"
she says. "You're hoping you can find an equal or better rate
when the rates change, and in today's rising interest rate environment,
it's probably not going to be there."
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