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What would be the effects of holding on to a shark card forever? I have a FP card that was my 1st rebuilder card 2 years ago. I'm leaning heavily to closing it soon. But I've been wondering what if I decided to keep it as long as I had credit. Here are some pros and cons I can think of.
Pros of keeping open:
-Oldest CC would be open on my CR, good for AAoA
-Oldest CC positive payment history
Cons of keeping open:
-Fees (MF=6.5, YF=45)
10 years=Total Fees $1,230 or
20 years=Total Fees $2,460
-FP being on CR might spook future lenders
-Not able to achieve highest potential FICO due to having FP (does FICO even care if this is FP or Chase/BOA etc)?
-No guarantee that security deposit would be returned as long as it remains open
Any others?
I'm a firm believer keep cards open as long as possible unless they have AF's and monthly fees
So that being said when an account cost you money to keep the card and its usefulness has been served
Get rid of it
@myjourney wrote:I'm a firm believer keep cards open as long as possible unless they have AF's and monthly fees
So that being said when an account cost you money to keep the card and its usefulness has been served
Get rid of it
+1
The Cons are stacked higher than the Pros - I would close it. Much better non-AF products out there, and once closed, the postive history remains for ~10 years or so.
close that mofo
@money_talks wrote:What would be the effects of holding on to a shark card forever? I have a FP card that was my 1st rebuilder card 2 years ago. I'm leaning heavily to closing it soon. But I've been wondering what if I decided to keep it as long as I had credit. Here are some pros and cons I can think of.
Pros of keeping open:
-Oldest CC would be open on my CR, good for AAoA
-Oldest CC positive payment history
Cons of keeping open:
-Fees (MF=6.5, YF=45)
10 years=Total Fees $1,230 or
20 years=Total Fees $2,460
-FP being on CR might spook future lenders
-Not able to achieve highest potential FICO due to having FP (does FICO even care if this is FP or Chase/BOA etc)?
-No guarantee that security deposit would be returned as long as it remains open
Any others?
I don't think FICO cares about FP. But as others have said, close the card. The pros don't even come close to outweighing the cons. Even if the only con were the monthly and annual fees, you shouuld close it.
@myjourney wrote:I'm a firm believer keep cards open as long as possible unless they have AF's and monthly fees
So that being said when an account cost you money to keep the card and its usefulness has been served
Get rid of it
100% agreed. You'll have the AAoA benefit for 10 years as a closed card so keeping it open is not worth the fees. The card served its purpose, time to move on!
@FinStar wrote:
@myjourney wrote:I'm a firm believer keep cards open as long as possible unless they have AF's and monthly fees
So that being said when an account cost you money to keep the card and its usefulness has been served
Get rid of it
+1
The Cons are stacked higher than the Pros - I would close it. Much better non-AF products out there, and once closed, the postive history remains for ~10 years or so.
+2
I'd go further and say there's absolutely no positive reason to keep the card open. Not wanting your AAoA to dip 10 years down the road isn't worth the fees.
I assume you have already got the usefulness from it and have moved on to better cards. If so, close it and save the money. Like the poster mentioned above, it will stay on your credit report for ten years usually, so any negatifve effect won't be felt until then and by then it will be very minimal if you have continued other accounts for length history.
What's FP stand for?