Originally posted by northernladuk
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Reply to: Banks still giving away free money?
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Previously on "Banks still giving away free money?"
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Hmm. Other than councils and online booking fees, the only places I see charging a premium for CC payments are crappy shops like £-stretcher. Is that where you do all your shopping NL?
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I bought my car on my credit card and didn't get charged any extra. Even worse for the seller, I did it in 3 separate transactions - deposit followed by the balance in 2 halves, clearing the card off in between each payment. The only reason I did that was because I wanted the rewards from the spend on the credit card, rather than just handing cash over / doing a bank transfer.Originally posted by northernladuk View PostIt's more than likely you will get charged 5% for using a credit card. The seller will get charged that by Visa so he isn't going to swallow it.
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The sensible approach would be to wait for the 0% balance transfer one to be approved before spending the money on the other card.Originally posted by d000hg View PostFair point, if you have another card with the spare capacity this would be cheaper than opening a CC to take all the money out as a loan.
More risky though, in case you suddenly find you can't get approved for the new CC after putting 10k on one which isn't 0%
If you have several cards it's a useful trick for managing cashflow. When I moved back to the UK from Germany I was fairly skint so I put almost all of my spending on a CC and transferred it to another 0% one. It cost the 3% transfer fee or whatever but that enabled me to stockpile cash for the warchest very quickly.
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Fair point, if you have another card with the spare capacity this would be cheaper than opening a CC to take all the money out as a loan.Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View PostI guess you could buy something on CC e.g. a car and then transfer it to Nationwide - that's free money when you take into account inflation.
More risky though, in case you suddenly find you can't get approved for the new CC after putting 10k on one which isn't 0%
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It's more than likely you will get charged 5% for using a credit card. The seller will get charged that by Visa so he isn't going to swallow it.Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View PostI guess you could buy something on CC e.g. a car and then transfer it to Nationwide - that's free money when you take into account inflation.
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Interesting you say that. I bid on a private reg from the DVLA yesterday. A63 AMG. Went for around 8K in the end. Not a chance I was paying that. I withdrew my 900 quid bid in disgust.Originally posted by AtW View PostSL 63?
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It's normally a %age of the outstanding balance that is slightly more than the %age they charge as interest i.e. 2% when monthly interest rate is 1.5% or similar. Some are 5%.Originally posted by d000hg View PostBut isn't minimum payment calculated based on the interest and the outstanding balance?
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I guess you could buy something on CC e.g. a car and then transfer it to Nationwide - that's free money when you take into account inflation.Originally posted by DirtyDog View PostBarclaycard are offering 31 months at 0% plus 2.99% transfer fee
Nationwide are offering 26 months at 0% but only 0.75% transfer fee
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Barclaycard are offering 31 months at 0% plus 2.99% transfer feeOriginally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View PostThinking of getting a comfy contractormobile and while I have the money there I want to keep my warchest healthy in case of downtime. I had a look at the latest bank transfer credit cards on offer and I was
shocked. 29 months @ 0% with a 4% fee. That works out at 1.65% APR. is that not classified as free money?!
Looks like the cheapest loan one can get.....
Is this not symptom of the same disease we had before the crash?
Nationwide are offering 26 months at 0% but only 0.75% transfer fee
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2006, hardly new but could be a good deal...Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View Post
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Mercs go from 20 to 200k I can assure you that the comfortable ones are not 20k newOriginally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View PostWtf would you spend 50k on a 3 year old merc!?!? It depreciates half the value in 3 years and I really doubt you will spend 25k maintaining it for 3 years unless you want to change all its parts every service!
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