Oaktree
Super Member
I suppose if you travel a lot it's handy but I don't so I'll just take the cash back.Still not convinced the airline miles are better than just getting cash back though...
I suppose if you travel a lot it's handy but I don't so I'll just take the cash back.Still not convinced the airline miles are better than just getting cash back though...
FICO is complicated, but depending on some variables, the house could have been a factor. Paying something off is not usually bas good for your credit score as making regular payments. The algorithm does not know if you are super responsible or if you were gifted a payoff. The age of your credit is a positive. If your house was your oldest credit account, that could have dropped you some, too.That said, for the life of me, can't figure out a FICO score. My FICO score actually dropped below 800 AFTER we paid off the house and land in full (and we have money saved). Could be because I took out that loan with the credit union for the bathroom work, but with a dual income, it's a no brainer it will be paid (I could pay it in full now if I wanted to very easily). It's also the ONLY reason why I shop at best buy (only "store" credit card I own). Probably will replace my 15 year old Mac with a new one. 18 month 0% interest is hard to pass up for someone like me LOL
The mistake we made (because we wanted the place we bought because fell in love with the surrounding "land"), is play it safe and went with 30 year mortgage.FICO is complicated, but depending on some variables, the house could have been a factor. Paying something off is not usually bas good for your credit score as making regular payments. The algorithm does not know if you are super responsible or if you were gifted a payoff. The age of your credit is a positive. If your house was your oldest credit account, that could have dropped you some, too.
The bank I used to work for bought the Credit Card portfolio of another bank. It included the Best Buy card. My bank did some secret shopper investigations around Best Buy's business practices vis-a-vis credit issuance. We sold off the Best Buy portion, even though it was seemingly the 'best' part. It seems Best Buy was too predatory for our tastes. The company did not publish the reasons. I am no longer bound by nondisclosure. Oddly enough we sold it to the other big bank for whom I worked many years.
On our first house we went with a 30 year mortgage instead of a 15. The monthly payments were lower, but the interest was a bit higher... 12.5% AFTER we paid 3 points!The mistake we made (because we wanted the place we bought because fell in love with the surrounding "land"), is play it safe and went with 30 year mortgage.
Need to check with my wife, but the way we figured it out, it would have saved us money to pay everything off as we saved "extra", per the house insurance and taxes in the Escrow, which was built into the loan and payment. No penalty for paying it off sooner.
Don't get me wrong, we are not financial experts, and we could have made mistakes in our planning, but we're not hurting due to those mistakes if that makes sense.
As far as Best buy, I hate ever having to walk into that store. That said, a 2k desktop only paying $112 a month for 18 months (at a competitive sell price) and paying off within a year at 0% interest, will get me every time when I'm ready to pull the trigger. I'm just odd that I'd rather break the payments into monthly at no interest than take 2k out of the account. Generally with money, I don't make a deal with the devil if that makes sense.
The only time we really bite the bullet is when we buy a used vehicle and pay cash for it and that's pretty rare.
Sidenote - You mentioned a algorithm. God forbid you actually know who you're doing business with![]()
We did similar, it was better than *** at the time. Well maybe not better, but close.We had an amortization table with all 360 lines of payments printed out and kept it hanging on the wall in our home office. It was 7 pages long. The first month, we made a double payment and applied the overage to the principle. We crossed off 29 future payments with that 1 extra payment. It was beautiful!We did it again the next month and knocked off another 20+ payments. And so on.
Don't sell yourself short. We've been debt free since 1995 and have a great credit rating.Heaven help me if I ever need to take out a loan. I haven't had debt and monthly payments on debt in forever. I probably have a credit rating of zero.
I do carry a CC and a DC, I tend to use the DC for groceries and gas and the CC for other items. No real logic behind that, just habit. CC is paid off ahead of due date.
Yep. It was exciting to see the payments fall off the chart. A real rush.We did similar, it was better than *** at the time. Well maybe not better, but close.![]()
I sincerely believe credit can be a good thing, as long as it's used wisely.Heaven help me if I ever need to take out a loan. I haven't had debt and monthly payments on debt in forever. I probably have a credit rating of zero.
A famous person once said “Money makes women ho***y“.We did similar, it was better than *** at the time. Well maybe not better, but close.![]()
You have reason to be concerned, in a funny sort of way. It’s been 15 years since I have had debt. I went to buy a second Kubota recently and take the 0% financing rather than raid my investments to pay for it. Kubota Credit balked. I gave them a peek at my retirement portfolio and all was good to go. I’m retired with no wage income.Heaven help me if I ever need to take out a loan. I haven't had debt and monthly payments on debt in forever. I probably have a credit rating of zero.
I do carry a CC and a DC, I tend to use the DC for groceries and gas and the CC for other items. No real logic behind that, just habit. CC is paid off ahead of due date.
Yep.I sincerely believe credit can be a good thing, as long as it's used wisely.
When my wife convinced me to get high dollar hearing aids through the doctor, 0% interest was my friend, even though I understand that in life, generally things are not free.
Agreed. Obviously, no one is lending you money for free, interest charge most likely baked into the price. I wonder if you'd get a discount to pay in full.I sincerely believe credit can be a good thing, as long as it's used wisely.
When my wife convinced me to get high dollar hearing aids through the doctor, 0% interest was my friend, even though I understand that in life, generally things are not free.
I always pay in full each month, though I pay by check, never autopay. Again, no one is giving you cashback bonus out of the goodness of their heart, I'm sure they just charge the merchant more who adjusts his prices to compensate. No free lunch, but you might as well take advantage of the gimmickry.Credit card can be cheaper than cash if you get 1%-2% off purchases and on autopay paying balance in full.
I can speak from my own industry and say that when someone offers 0% financing, the finance price is built into the cost. Some guys will offer a cash discount and some guys will just pocket the difference even if you do pay cash.Agreed. Obviously, no one is lending you money for free, interest charge most likely baked into the price. I wonder if you'd get a discount to pay in full.
Well, no...when I had my company I started accepting credit cards early on and I was charged $0.35 per transaction and 1.9% fee (retired 9 years now...from memory). I never added this into my fee or gave a discount for cash. My business jumped when I started accepting cards so to me that offset this charge. Rarely someone wanted to charge something for, say, $1.00 and we would ask for cash.Agreed. Obviously, no one is lending you money for free, interest charge most likely baked into the price. I wonder if you'd get a discount to pay in full.
I always pay in full each month, though I pay by check, never autopay. Again, no one is giving you cashback bonus out of the goodness of their heart, I'm sure they just charge the merchant more who adjusts his prices to compensate. No free lunch, but you might as well take advantage of the gimmickry.
Agreed. Obviously, no one is lending you money for free, interest charge most likely baked into the price. I wonder if you'd get a discount to pay in full.