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Hello all, I am thinking about finally applying for an Amex revolver. I am trying to decide between the BCE and the BCP. Currently, I use my Chase Freedom as my primary card and run about 500-1000 through it per month.
1. I got my Amex Zync in April of 2011 and as far as I understand, if I apply for a card this month, the card will be backdated to January of 2011... am I correct?
2. With my credit scores (as seen in my signature), do I even have a chance to get approved for the BCP? The only negative thing on my reports is a 30 day late from 2007 and besides that, it's completely perfect. My util is currently around 40% and I am waiting until Jan 21st for my new balances to report (util will be down to around 15% by then).
3. Finally, should I go for the BCE or BCP. I would be using this card for gas, eating out, bills, groceries.. pretty much everything. Will the BCP with an annual fee of $75 even be worth it if I am spending $500-1000ish a month or am I better off with the BCE with no annual fee?
Any advice is appreciated!!
@Viper786 wrote:Hello all, I am thinking about finally applying for an Amex revolver. I am trying to decide between the BCE and the BCP. Currently, I use my Chase Freedom as my primary card and run about 500-1000 through it per month.
1. I got my Amex Zync in April of 2011 and as far as I understand, if I apply for a card this month, the card will be backdated to January of 2011... am I correct?
2. With my credit scores (as seen in my signature), do I even have a chance to get approved for the BCP? The only negative thing on my reports is a 30 day late from 2007 and besides that, it's completely perfect. My util is currently around 40% and I am waiting until Jan 21st for my new balances to report (util will be down to around 15% by then).
3. Finally, should I go for the BCE or BCP. I would be using this card for gas, eating out, bills, groceries.. pretty much everything. Will the BCP with an annual fee of $75 even be worth it if I am spending $500-1000ish a month or am I better off with the BCE with no annual fee?
Any advice is appreciated!!
Yes, if you are approved for an AMEX this month it will have a date opened of Jan 2011.
I think you have a good chance of being approved once your utilization is paid down. If your only negative is a single 30 day late then I think you'll be successful.
You can always apply for the BCE now and then convert it to BCP later if the math supports paying the annual fee. You'll have to estimate what you'll spend on groceries, gas, etc... to know if the cash back outweighs the cost.
@pizzadude wrote:Yes, if you are approved for an AMEX this month it will have a date opened of Jan 2011.
I think you have a good chance of being approved once your utilization is paid down. If your only negative is a single 30 day late then I think you'll be successful.
You can always apply for the BCE now and then convert it to BCP later if the math supports paying the annual fee. You'll have to estimate what you'll spend on groceries, gas, etc... to know if the cash back outweighs the cost.
Thanks for the input, I'll probably end up applying for the BCE instead of the BCP for now and as you suggested, convert it to BCP later if it's worth it
@Viper786 wrote:Hello all, I am thinking about finally applying for an Amex revolver. I am trying to decide between the BCE and the BCP. Currently, I use my Chase Freedom as my primary card and run about 500-1000 through it per month.
1. I got my Amex Zync in April of 2011 and as far as I understand, if I apply for a card this month, the card will be backdated to January of 2011... am I correct?
2. With my credit scores (as seen in my signature), do I even have a chance to get approved for the BCP? The only negative thing on my reports is a 30 day late from 2007 and besides that, it's completely perfect. My util is currently around 40% and I am waiting until Jan 21st for my new balances to report (util will be down to around 15% by then).
3. Finally, should I go for the BCE or BCP. I would be using this card for gas, eating out, bills, groceries.. pretty much everything. Will the BCP with an annual fee of $75 even be worth it if I am spending $500-1000ish a month or am I better off with the BCE with no annual fee?
Any advice is appreciated!!
1. Yes
@2. You should be OK. I got triple pulled and the approval letter cited TU @ 680. I have a short sale from 2009 and they seemed to look the other way.
3. Do the math. As I understand, the groceries max at $360/year on BCP, $180/year on BCE. $360-$180-BCP AF=$105. Then there's the other categories to earn in. I did BCE and will evaluate after a few months. I'm allergic to AF's.
Thanks for the input, I'll probably end up applying for the BCE instead of the BCP for now and as you suggested, convert it to BCP later if it's worth it
Need to wait about 13 months before you can PC to AF card.......correct me if im wrong but its 99%.
Your change approve very high but i would wait until your new Utiliti affect and also check and see if they been SP you through experian.
People have done the math elsewhere, but you don't have to spend very much on groceries to earn back the AF, and that's not including spending in the other categories.
Also, if you manage to net the $100 or $150 sign-up bonus, that pays the AF for up to 2 years as well. Since you say you're planning to shift a good portion of your spending over to whichever one you choose, I don't think you have anything to lose by going for the BCP.
@nicholasyud wrote:Thanks for the input, I'll probably end up applying for the BCE instead of the BCP for now and as you suggested, convert it to BCP later if it's worth it
Need to wait about 13 months before you can PC to AF card.......correct me if im wrong but its 99%.
Your change approve very high but i would wait until your new Utiliti affect and also check and see if they been SP you through experian.
So there's a few thing I should point out. BCP gives an extra $50 in signup bonus, so there's a good portion of your first year's annual fee right there. Then, with just $833 in grocery spending in the first year you will get your entire annual fee back. All spending on gas, qualifying department stores, and additional groceries starts netting you a profit in the first year over the BCE. So with just $1,000 in total spending, and $833 of that being groceries ($69.50/month) you will get 12 months to decide where your spending needs fit.
For subsequent years all it takes is $210 of grocery spending a month ($2,500 overall) to earn $150 in rewards, which gains you a net off $75 after the annual fee, which is the same as BCE. So that's your break even point. Anything more than that, and ANY gas spending on the card justifies the annual fee. So, that's the math. It doesn't lie. Try to figure out where your spending hits.
As for the bolded above, that's true. Easier to start with BCP and move to BCE.
Also, for further insight and a repitition on my comments:
http://ficoforums.myfico.com/t5/Credit-Cards/AMEX-BCE-BCP/m-p/1612094/highlight/true#M444321
To Snack
I was mentioned to OP that if he decide to go with BCE then he need to wait about 13 months before he can PC to BCP.........which stuck on my case.
I PC my delta to BCE and i tihnk i like BCP structure better.
Thanks for all the replies and advice everyone. I have decided I will apply for the BCE. My final statement that I am waiting to report to the agencies was posted on the 12th and as of right now, according to Credit Karma, my new balance has not been reported.
Is Amex still pulling Experian exclusively? I have a lot of inquiries on my TU (13, but 4 are those are from different lenders when I got an auto loan in July of 2012) as opposed to 7 on my Experian (2 are auto loans). Not exactly sure about EQ, haven't pulled my EQ report in a while.
Also, how long does it typically take after a statement posts for the new balances to be reflected at the credit agencies?