Ten Facts Credit Card Companies Don’t Want You to Know
The idea of a credit card is a peculiar notion that has only come about in the last fifty years. Instead of paying for purchases with wealth that we already have, we are now borrowing money for every day purchases, even things as quick trip to McDonalds or a bottle of pop from a vending machine. Debt has become a societal norm and it’s here to stay. There’s nothing inherently wrong with debt, however when debt is misused, it can become a major financial nightmare. Credit cards are one of the most abused and misused financial products on the market. Here are ten facts that the credit card companies would prefer that you didn’t know.
1. Universal Default Provisions – Even if you are making your payments as agreed with one credit card, but happen to be late on another payment or if your credit score happens to go down a bit, the credit card company could jump your interest rate by upwards of an additional 20%. You could be paying around 14% for a decent credit card, but if another bank thinks you missed a payment on an entirely different loan, your rate could jump upwards of 35%!
2. Very Few Pay Their Cards Off – According to PBS Frontline, there are 35 million Americans who only pay the minimum payment on their credit cards. These people could be paying for their everyday purchases and associated finance charges for decades before paying it off. By federal law, the banks only have to require you to make a minimum payment which takes care of all the fees per the month and one percent of the principal balance. Paying this minimum amount will cause many Americans to pay three or four times what they should have for a product
3. There’s No Maximum Interest Rate – Credit card companies specifically state in just about every card holder agreement that they can change your rate as they please and without notice. Most major banks reside in states that have no usury rate either, so in theory they could charge you whatever rate they pleased without telling you and it would be entirely legal to do so.
4. Credit Card Debt Correlates to Bankruptcy – When people file bankruptcy, more often than not they have extremely high credit card balances which are just beating them up financially. They get into some sort of mess and charge everything to their credit cards, making the problem worse. There is a statistical correlation between having high credit-card debt and filing bankruptcy. The Motley Fool states that 1,300,000 credit card users filed bankruptcy in 2005.
5. Late Payment Fiascos – In 1996, the Supreme Court made a ruling which eliminated restrictions on late fees that could be charged to consumers. Now at most major credit card companies if they even think that your payment is late by an hour, they will charge you a fee of $30, $40, or at some places even $50. Some major banks have even been accused of intentionally not depositing checks which came in on time, and then charging their customers undo late-fees.
6. American’s Are Up To Their Eyeballs in Credit Card Debt – According to the Motley fool, Americans have borrowed a total of $1,700,000,000,000 in consumer debt. Statistically, the average American carries $8,562 in credit card debt, and there was a total of $50,000,000,000 charged in finance charges annually.
7. Most Rewards Programs Aren’t Worth It – A lot of banks try to lure consumers into getting credit cards with rewards programs that are supposed to give consumers an incentive to use their credit card. However the money used to give out the rewards doesn’t come from thin air. Consumers are paying for their own rewards through finance charges and membership fees whether they are realizing it or not. With one of Wells Fargo’s rewards programs, you have to spend $5000 a year just to break even with the rewards program membership fee.
8. Credit Cards Only Serve One Purpose – If you haven’t figured it out yet, the credit card exist for one reason and one reason only—to put you into more debt. No one wants to have huge amounts of debt, so why make use of a tool that’s only purpose is to get you into debt? The best way to get out of credit card debt is to never get into it in the first place.
9. Statistically You Spend More With Credit – A Dunn and Bradstreet study stated that if you pay with a credit card, you will statistically spend 12%-18% more on your purchases as opposed to paying with cash. When you pay cash, you feel the money leaving you and it hurts; with credit cards that’s not the case. If you use a credit card, you will spend more money whether you realize it or not.
10. You Can’t Outsmart the Credit Card Industry – Credit card companies spend millions of dollars each year figuring out consumer habits and behaviors so that they can separate you from your money. They know how people act and how people think, and statistically will make money off of you. A lot of people think they are getting rich of the credit card industry through rewards points and arbitrage games, but the reality is that they’re not making much at all and are adding all sorts of risk into their life. Credit card companies can easily absorb these cost, because knows that statistically they will make much more money from people than they lose to a couple of people here and there not making the industry any money.









That is a great article about credit cards. There is a company called Credit Assistance Network in Florida that helped me deal with my credit cards and they also helped me clean up my credit. They have a great article on their website about sleezy credit card companies. Here it is: http://www.expert-credit-advice.com/credit_card_expert.htm
Thank you for this great article. I have been battling against credit cards in my blog passionately, and the statistic on spending more money with credit cards is always disputed. Do you have a link to a source I can use to quote the Dunn and Bradstreet study on spending more with credit cards? Please?! I would love to read the study. All I’ve been using is a Wall Street Journal article about a 2002 VISA study where they found that people bought 20-30% more.
Thanks for your help!
[...] 10 Facts Credit Card Companies Don’t Want You to Know from Discover Debt Freedom. [...]
I agree with #7 - Most Rewards Programs Aren’t Worth It; but there ARE some good ones. I just took a trip to the other side of the world in first class that took me about 4 years to accumulate all the miles. At 70/year to have it, I bought 2 first class tickets to Australia for my wife and I - so I really enjoyed that piece. but overall, I agree…
Amazing factoids. It just astonishes me that millions of otherwise sane Americans run a tab on their credit cards–it’s such a rip!
It would be interesting to know more about the figures that allegedly prove people spend more when they charge than when they pay in cash. My sense is that I pay more when I have cash in hand, mostly because digging out a charge card, having to reveal private information for identification purposes, and then later having to keep track of the paper trail creates just enough extra hassle to cause me to think twice about buying something. On the other hand, maybe that’s just a perception caused by the fact that cash disappears without a trace.
Picked this post up on the Carnival of PF, BTW, & am linking with it at Funny about Money.
I do outsmart the CC companies. I get 5% off on gas and 1.5% off on everything else. And since I always pay on time and never carry a balance it’s like I get an interest free loan every month! They foot the bill all month while my cash sits in a high interest savings account.
great work, good information
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The only time the points plans are worth it is when you’ve got nothing on the card, and you live in a place that allows you to pay your rent or mortgage with your credit card.
You can’t outsmart credit card companies?
1 - Don’t spend more than you can’t pay off immediately or in a reasonable amount of time depending on your income at time of purchase.
2 - See #1.
I agree!
Years ago, say 20 or so, what credit cards get away with now was considered criminal usary.
The difference between a serious drug habit and a credit card addiction is that you can kick drugs with help, but credit card debts are nearly impossible to kick unless you go entirely belly up financially…maybe (thanks to Congress) not even then.
Actually there is a max interest rate in canada.. 60% though so you’re still in trouble either way..
-MikeG
That is why I went out of my way to get rid of my credit card debt.