If you’ve been choosing plastic over paper for some time now (that is, if you’ve been using credit cards over cash for most of your purchases), you’re probably well aware of just how little your creditors actually care about you. I’m sure it came as quite a shock when you opened that initial credit card bill, and discovered that a good chunk of your bill was going to pay down interest rate hikes and other arbitrary fees.
Instead of keeping their customer’s best interests in mind, card companies will continually look for ways to screw them out of more of their hard-earned duckets, leaving many looking for debt relief the next time they open a bill. And now that the federal government has stepped in on behalf of the rest of us and passed laws designed to protect from defaults, interest hikes and the like, creditors are devising new ways to take your happy buck back from you. If you’re not careful, you’ll end up with a list of unwanted charges and find yourself in need of credit repair services fast. Here are just a few of the methods to watch out for, so you won’t be too surprised the next time your bill comes in…
- The grace period. Many with credit cards are already aware of the “grace period” – the time you have to pay off a new purchase before you’re hit with a finance charge. These grace periods vary by creditor and consumer, so while some people may have a little bit of extra time to pay off a purchase, others have been slapped with the finance charge almost as soon as they make the purchase in the first place, it seems. Luckily, card companies are forced to send your bill early enough so that you can avoid the finance charge entirely – assuming you have the money in your account to pay the bill in the first place.
- Weekend/holiday fees. If you’ve ever paid your credit card bill over the weekend, or you received a bill with a due date over a holiday like Christmas, and paid it the following week (say the bill was due Saturday, but you pay it the following Monday), you may have been hit with an extra processing fee. This can cause real headaches, especially around the holidays, when money flows like eggnog. Luckily, this is also one of the easiest extra charges to avoid as well. The Credit CARD Act of 2009 states that card companies are no longer allowed to charge you a late fee for paying the day after a weekend or holiday, but anything after that is fair game. Avoid the charge by paying a day or two before the weekend.
- Using your card overseas (or not). I went on a Eurotrip (well, actually more of a England/Ireland trip) a few years ago, and was shocked and dismayed when I saw my credit card bill after I got back home. I had figured they’d charge me a fee for currency conversion, but damn if it wasn’t a lot more than I had thought it would be. Some card companies won’t even wait for you to go overseas; if you purchase anything online from another country, like some sweet rims for your ’95 Honda Civic from Japan, and your payment is processed in yen, you’ll be hit just as hard as I was. The solution? Don’t buy anything online from a foreign country if you don’t want to pay any more for it than you already are.
- Inactivity fees. Here’s a fee we’re all hit with at some point in time, assuming you’ve got cards that you stop using for an extended period of time. Your creditors don’t like being neglected, and so start looking for ways to recapture your attention – which generally translates to charging you an inactivity fee as a wake-up call. Thankfully, such charges have since been outlawed, but card companies already have a follow-up charge waiting in the wings if you fail to make a minimum amount of purchases by year’s end. So either keep making those charges, or if you don’t plan on using the card ever again, close it to avoid the hassle.
