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Interest Rates Page 4
Balance transfer fee A fee for transferring balances from another card to this card, if any.
Late (payment) fee The fee imposed if your payment is late, if any.
Late fees are typically charged when a cardholder fails to make at least the minimum monthly payment by the due date. Some issuers charge a flat late fee, for example, $10. Other issuers charge a fee that is a percentage of the minimum payment due (e.g., 2 to 5%). Note the Schumer box reveals the late payment fee is $10. Some issuers allow cardholders 10 or 20 days to pay their bill after the due date before a late fee will be charged. Other issuers, however, charge late fees immediately after the due date.
To avoid late fees, mail payments in plenty of time to arrive before the due date.
Over-the-credit-limit fee The fee imposed if your charges exceed the credit limit set for your card, if any. This fee is charged each time you exceed your limit, so you could be hit with several of them during one billing period.
Interest rates are variable. Credit card rates are set by adding a spread, or margin, to a base rate. Your base rate is often a widely used index rate, which is almost always a rate that changes periodically. The spread that is added to calculate your rate depends on your credit history. If you pay your bills consistently and on time, the spread may be as few as 2 or 3 percentage points. If your credit history reveals that you make late payments, or have too much debt, the spread may be 5 or 6 percentage points or more.
Rates are higher than those for secured loans. Credit card rates are higher than those on home equity loans, in part, because they do not have collateral. Lenders face more risk in providing unsecured credit than they do with secured credit. If you are establishing or repairing credit, consider applying for a secured card.
The stated rate is not your actual interest rate. The advertised rate on a credit card is often the card's simple interest rate. The effective interest rate, however, is your true cost of borrowing. It should include annual fees you pay to use the card. The compounded interest rate is a better barometer of your effective interest rate. For example, if your card has a rate of 12%, your monthly rate would be 1%. Because credit card interest is compounded monthly, the effective annual interest rate on a 12% simple-rate card is 12.68%.
Interest rates have a ceiling. Credit cards generally have a maximum interest rate, or ceiling. If you are delinquent in making payments, your card company may seek to automatically impose the ceiling rate, which can be devastating if you have thousands of dollars in card balances that are affected. Be sure to read the agreement with your card company to see what your ceiling rate is (often, it is 21%), and what terms may result in you having to pay the ceiling rate.
Some states have usury laws that limit the ceiling rate that lenders can charge borrowers in that state. For example, Arkansas limits the ceiling rate on loans to 5 percentage points over the discount rate. As a result, Arkansas banks typically offer the lowest-rate credit cards in the nation.
Interest on credit card debt is not tax-deductible. Unlike a home equity loan, you cannot deduct the interest you pay on a credit card from your taxable income. Thus, if you are in the 25% income tax bracket and have a 10% rate, your after-tax rate is also 10%. Your after-tax rate on a home equity loan, however, is 7.5%. Top...
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