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Hello all-
I recently have been offered a 0% APR balance transfer offer on my BOA card and am considering moving all my existing balances over that card. The 0% offer is good for 20 months until October 2017. I wanted to hear some opionons on this. If you could please help me out that would be terrific!!!
Below are the current accounts and balances and existing APR's on the accounts:
Outstanding Balance | Credit Line | Interest Rate | |
American Express Premier Rewards Gold Card | $0.00 | NPSL | 15.49% for pay over time |
American Express Gold Delta SkyMiles 61007 | $0.00 | $12,300.00 | 10.49% |
American Airlines AAdvantage Silver World Elite Master Card by Barclays | $2,411.60 | $10,000.00 | 13.24% |
Bank of America Cash Rewards Signature Visa | $2,800.00 | $21,000.00 | 17.24% |
Discover It Card | $1,822.39 | $11,900.00 | 14.49% |
Chase Sapphire Visa Signature | $0.00 | $20,000.00 | 12.49% |
Chase Marriott Rewards Premier Visa Signature | $1,698.27 | $6,500.00 | 16.24% |
Citi ThankYou Preferred World MasterCard | $3,492.07 | $10,100.00 | 11.49% |
Capital One Quicksilver Visa Signature | $1,968.05 | $21,000.00 | 18.15% |
Best Buy store card | $0.00 | $10,000.00 | |
JCPenny store card | $0.00 | $10,000.00 | |
Macy's store card | $0.00 | $10,000.00 |
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In essence you want to BT 11.4k bringing BofA to 14.2k on a 21k limit
If it saves you money and you can pay it off in that time frame then by all means go for it.
Just be aware on the cost if not fully paid by that time and does it have BT fees?
Do you have BT offers on your Discover card as well? They are on your online account, they don't send mailers anymore, but BT should be there.
I'd suggest moving both BofA and Discover balances to the QS, there is no BT fee for that and it clears both BofA and Discover to zero.
Then use the BofA offer to move the Barclay, Marriott and TY Preferred to the BofA. There will be a 4% fee for this, about $300 but you then have the 0% APR for however many months.
Move the QS to the Discover card. There is likely a 0% APR for 3% Fee available, or a low APR with no BT fee available on Discover. Depending on how fast you want to pay, the no BT Fee may be a slightly better deal.
This way you don't overload any one card, and you have low or 0% APR for a year or more. This sequence should be done over a series of weeks, to allow a few days at each step for the balance to settle in, for the old card to register the zero balance.
@myjourney wrote:In essence you want to BT 11.4k bringing BofA to 14.2k on a 21k limit
If it saves you money and you can pay it off in that time frame then by all means go for it.
Just be aware on the cost if not fully paid by that time and does it have BT fees?
Yes, it appears thats about right. So, the card would not be maxed out at all and still have some of the CL left. So, it wouldn't be 100% util. The concerns I have would be for my FICO score, would it take a big hit or no?
I am unsure of what you mean by the cost if not fully paid by the time the BT offer is expired. I believe it said it would go back to the normal APR rate. The BT fee I believe it said it was 4% of the balance transfered.
@RyGuy4690 wrote:
@myjourney wrote:In essence you want to BT 11.4k bringing BofA to 14.2k on a 21k limit
If it saves you money and you can pay it off in that time frame then by all means go for it.
Just be aware on the cost if not fully paid by that time and does it have BT fees?
Yes, it appears thats about right. So, the card would not be maxed out at all and still have some of the CL left. So, it wouldn't be 100% util. The concerns I have would be for my FICO score, would it take a big hit or no?
I am unsure of what you mean by the cost if not fully paid by the time the BT offer is expired. I believe it said it would go back to the normal APR rate. The BT fee I believe it said it was 4% of the balance transfered.
UTL on the one card would be about 66% not going to hurt your scores that much and if it saves you dollars then scores will recover as you pay it off ....so no biggy
Cost = see link
http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/credit-cards/credit-card-balance-transfer-calculator.aspx
What's left over if not paid by end of 0% and you need to factor that in as well (cost)
@NRB525 wrote:Do you have BT offers on your Discover card as well? They are on your online account, they don't send mailers anymore, but BT should be there.
I'd suggest moving both BofA and Discover balances to the QS, there is no BT fee for that and it clears both BofA and Discover to zero.
Then use the BofA offer to move the Barclay, Marriott and TY Preferred to the BofA. There will be a 4% fee for this, about $300 but you then have the 0% APR for however many months.
Move the QS to the Discover card. There is likely a 0% APR for 3% Fee available, or a low APR with no BT fee available on Discover. Depending on how fast you want to pay, the no BT Fee may be a slightly better deal.
This way you don't overload any one card, and you have low or 0% APR for a year or more. This sequence should be done over a series of weeks, to allow a few days at each step for the balance to settle in, for the old card to register the zero balance.
The existing balance on BofA is 0% until 5/17. So, I do not want to mess with that balance. There are no 0% offers on the QS card. On the Discover card, there is a 0% APR for 12 months with a 3% fee and a 4.99% for 18 months with no fee.
What do you suggest?
@NRB525 wrote:Do you have BT offers on your Discover card as well? They are on your online account, they don't send mailers anymore, but BT should be there.
I'd suggest moving both BofA and Discover balances to the QS, there is no BT fee for that and it clears both BofA and Discover to zero.
Then use the BofA offer to move the Barclay, Marriott and TY Preferred to the BofA. There will be a 4% fee for this, about $300 but you then have the 0% APR for however many months.
Move the QS to the Discover card. There is likely a 0% APR for 3% Fee available, or a low APR with no BT fee available on Discover. Depending on how fast you want to pay, the no BT Fee may be a slightly better deal.
This way you don't overload any one card, and you have low or 0% APR for a year or more. This sequence should be done over a series of weeks, to allow a few days at each step for the balance to settle in, for the old card to register the zero balance.
The existing balance on BofA is 0% until 5/17. So, I do not want to mess with that balance. There are no 0% offers on the QS card. On the Discover card, there is a 0% APR for 12 months with a 3% fee and a 4.99% for 18 months with no fee.
What do you suggest?
Ok, so then just BT the Discover to the QS to zero Discover, then decide which of the Discover rates you want, and after step 1, move the now higher QS balance to the Discover. I know QS almost never has a low rate BT offer, but the point of using the QS is to zero the card those amounts come from. Because there is no BT fee on the QS, your cost is the few days of interest the QS gets on that temporary balance, before it all goes away.
You can just BT the Barclay, Marriott and TYP to the BofA, since it is stacking two 0% BT offers. Just know that the current $2,800 will expire a bit sooner, and there will be some amount that you'll want to consider moving, or start paying that portion a bit faster in place. The TYP and perhaps the Barclay may have a BT offer by then.
@NRB525 wrote:Ok, so then just BT the Discover to the QS to zero Discover, then decide which of the Discover rates you want, and after step 1, move the now higher QS balance to the Discover. I know QS almost never has a low rate BT offer, but the point of using the QS is to zero the card those amounts come from. Because there is no BT fee on the QS, your cost is the few days of interest the QS gets on that temporary balance, before it all goes away.
You can just BT the Barclay, Marriott and TYP to the BofA, since it is stacking two 0% BT offers. Just know that the current $2,800 will expire a bit sooner, and there will be some amount that you'll want to consider moving, or start paying that portion a bit faster in place. The TYP and perhaps the Barclay may have a BT offer by then.
so you suggest taking the balance of the discover and trasnfering it to the QS then use the bt offer on the discover for 0% then transfer the QS balance which has the discover balance on it back to the discover for 0%? then BT the barclay marriott typ to the boa card. so in essense have the balances of the qs and the discover on the discover at 0% then the other balances on the BofA? just confused as to why I wouldnt just want to put the entire amount on the BofA??
@RyGuy4690 wrote:Hello all-
I recently have been offered a 0% APR balance transfer offer on my BOA card and am considering moving all my existing balances over that card. The 0% offer is good for 20 months until October 2017. I wanted to hear some opionons on this. If you could please help me out that would be terrific!!!
Below are the current accounts and balances and existing APR's on the accounts:
Outstanding Balance
Credit Line
Interest Rate
American Express Premier Rewards Gold Card
$0.00
NPSL
15.49% for pay over time
American Express Gold Delta SkyMiles 61007
$0.00
$12,300.00
10.49%
American Airlines AAdvantage Silver World Elite Master Card by Barclays
$2,411.60
$10,000.00
13.24%
Bank of America Cash Rewards Signature Visa
$2,800.00
$21,000.00
17.24%
Discover It Card
$1,822.39
$11,900.00
14.49%
Chase Sapphire Visa Signature
$0.00
$20,000.00
12.49%
Chase Marriott Rewards Premier Visa Signature
$1,698.27
$6,500.00
16.24%
Citi ThankYou Preferred World MasterCard
$3,492.07
$10,100.00
11.49%
Capital One Quicksilver Visa Signature
$1,968.05
$21,000.00
18.15%
Best Buy store card
$0.00
$10,000.00
JCPenny store card
$0.00
$10,000.00
Macy's store card
$0.00
$10,000.00
If you're presently paying interest on everything, then it might make sense to move some of that over to BOA, but
(a) you must factor in the balance transfer fees, and
(b) you shouldn't have the BOA balance report at over 6000
If you transfer 5000 and have a 3% BT fee, that's $150.
If you carry an average balance of $5000 for 3 months at 12%, that's $150.