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What's the reasoning behind applying for multiple cards at 1 time? How does this benefit your credit profile/score? How does putting your profile on alert with all of your lenders help you establish a good relationship? Also, how does having several 500$ - 1000$ limit cards help your purchasing power? Wouldn't your creditors be less like to extend you more credit if you have many "toy limit" cards. Doesn't this go against the old mantra "apply for credit as you need it"?
These are all somewhat rhetorical, but I really don't understand the thought process behind it. There are several people on the credit board that go on these sprees only to end up "laying" these very low limit cards to pasture, out growing the lender or CL, etc.
I'm fairly new to the credit game..as many of you probably have history longer than i've been alive...so, there maybe something I'm missing...help me understand?
@aamex wrote:What's the reasoning behind applying for multiple cards at 1 time? How does this benefit your credit profile/score? How does putting your profile on alert with all of your lenders help you establish a good relationship? Also, how does having several 500$ - 1000$ limit cards help your purchasing power? Wouldn't your creditors be less like to extend you more credit if you have many "toy limit" cards. Doesn't this go against the old mantra "apply for credit as you need it"?
These are all somewhat rhetorical, but I really don't understand the thought process behind it. There are several people on the credit board that go on these sprees only to end up "laying" these very low limit cards to pasture, out growing the lender or CL, etc.
I'm fairly new to the credit game..as many of you probably have history longer than i've been alive...so, there maybe something I'm missing...help me understand?
I wish I made better decisions on apps early in my rebuilding journey, I would have apped for better cards 1 at a time every 6 months.
They should really call it an "App binge".
Generally, when people can't resist the urge anymore they app for multiple cards because all the HPs will fall off at the same time. Once the dust clears they'll look for a company that doesn't pull whatever bureau has the lowest number of pulls or lock their other reports.
Some keep apping until getting a yes or spend all their time between apps obsessing over the next one.
Getting approved for a bunch of low limit cards and then fighting for CLIs is another way people do it.
I'm still pretty much convinced slow and steady wins the race but have probably suffered at times for being too conservative.
There's the idea that you will take a big hit right away from the inquiries and drop to AAoA, but you will recover more quickly than if you spread the apps out over time. There is some truth to that, that if you apply for all the cards you want at one time, in 2 years they will all be 2 years old, whereas if you spread them out many will be younger. So if you spree, you take a bigger hit right now, but can recover better over time. However, a lot of the time it seems more like an excuse to justify the "app itch" that many feel. Thinking, "I need to go ahead and app for all these cards I want right now so I'm in better shape later" when really you don't need them or it would be smarter to wait. Then people don't get the limits they wanted and in a few months they want to close some of their cards and go on another spree....
@aamex wrote:What's the reasoning behind applying for multiple cards at 1 time? How does this benefit your credit profile/score? How does putting your profile on alert with all of your lenders help you establish a good relationship? Also, how does having several 500$ - 1000$ limit cards help your purchasing power? Wouldn't your creditors be less like to extend you more credit if you have many "toy limit" cards. Doesn't this go against the old mantra "apply for credit as you need it"?
The It's possible my perspective's a bit different, as a rebuilder, than someone who's starting out fresh. I've also never actually gone on an app spree, FWIW.
But for me? I could care less about "purchasing power". Credit isn't money. True financial stability has very little to do with how much you've been invited to charge up, really. I just want some positive tradelines reporting. So a few cards with smaller limits would be fine for me. And honestly, I think the "apply for credit as you need it" has gone the way of the dodo bird. It's easier to get credit when you don't need it. Just ask anyone who's gone through any major life changes that left them short.
That said, I really don't understand folks who look to get as much credit as possible without being thoughtful about it. I can understand apping within a certain time frame so that in inquiries fall off at the same time, but if it's moved into the "binge" territory as drkaje mentioned? That's a little beyond the beyonds. But I can understand it. If you've gotten to a place, emotionally, where a getting credit card has become a status thing, rather than a plain & simple tool, then no wonder. These very boards have stories about people who app 20x at a stretch, or want a certain card just because. There was someone who wanted an Amex Platinum, just because...and he didn't care about the $450 AF, even though he had a fairly low income and couldn't use much of the rewards. Just wanted it.
@aamex wrote:What's the reasoning behind applying for multiple cards at 1 time? How does this benefit your credit profile/score? How does putting your profile on alert with all of your lenders help you establish a good relationship? Also, how does having several 500$ - 1000$ limit cards help your purchasing power? Wouldn't your creditors be less like to extend you more credit if you have many "toy limit" cards. Doesn't this go against the old mantra "apply for credit as you need it"?
These are all somewhat rhetorical, but I really don't understand the thought process behind it. There are several people on the credit board that go on these sprees only to end up "laying" these very low limit cards to pasture, out growing the lender or CL, etc.
I'm fairly new to the credit game..as many of you probably have history longer than i've been alive...so, there maybe something I'm missing...help me understand?
I have done a 'app spree,' and to be honest some of it is just because Ialways wanted certain cards. But also, there were cards that were newly available (US Bank Cash +, for example), that I felt I would be able to get at the time I was ready to app. There is some logic to doing apps at the same time so they age off together. Especially if you are closing some cards after you are appoved for the new ones.
People have different reasons for their app sprees. Some people app spree because they get cards for rewards, then cycle (churn) them, every so often to keep getting large sign up bonuses. Some people just are seeking more credit t help with utilization, some are adding cards they could't get when they had a baddie (BK, CO, etc) on their report, and now it is no longer reporting.
I think that app sprees should only be done when you know why you are doing it ( what benefit it is to YOU) , have the credit score/reports/credit history to support the cards you app for, and are knowledgeable/realistic about what you can get or are most likely to be approved for. If you research before you apply, you can eliminate alot of wasted apps. Too many people have 600 scores with numerous baddies, or BK's and CO's and apply without researching whether a creditor is BK/CO friendly, and get upset that they were denied.
Most everyone on this forum are sort of "credit geeks" and likely do lots of things in regards to credit that the general public would not do. I can only speak for myself, because I have been down the bad credit road, and rebuilt my credit using information I have learned here.
This game we are playing is chess, not checkers and you need to have a strategy to play effectively.
Don't forget sign up bonuses. When a card is going to give you $500+ just for applying (and sometimes hitting a minimum spend) the inquiry(ies) can be well worth it.
@Anonymous wrote:
@aamex wrote:What's the reasoning behind applying for multiple cards at 1 time? How does this benefit your credit profile/score? How does putting your profile on alert with all of your lenders help you establish a good relationship? Also, how does having several 500$ - 1000$ limit cards help your purchasing power? Wouldn't your creditors be less like to extend you more credit if you have many "toy limit" cards. Doesn't this go against the old mantra "apply for credit as you need it"?
The It's possible my perspective's a bit different, as a rebuilder, than someone who's starting out fresh. I've also never actually gone on an app spree, FWIW.But for me? I could care less about "purchasing power". Credit isn't money. True financial stability has very little to do with how much you've been invited to charge up, really. I just want some positive tradelines reporting. So a few cards with smaller limits would be fine for me. And honestly, I think the "apply for credit as you need it" has gone the way of the dodo bird. It's easier to get credit when you don't need it. Just ask anyone who's gone through any major life changes that left them short.That said, I really don't understand folks who look to get as much credit as possible without being thoughtful about it. I can understand apping within a certain time frame so that in inquiries fall off at the same time, but if it's moved into the "binge" territory as drkaje mentioned? That's a little beyond the beyonds. But I can understand it. If you've gotten to a place, emotionally, where a getting credit card has become a status thing, rather than a plain & simple tool, then no wonder. These very boards have stories about people who app 20x at a stretch, or want a certain card just because. There was someone who wanted an Amex Platinum, just because...and he didn't care about the $450 AF, even though he had a fairly low income and couldn't use much of the rewards. Just wanted it.
I agree with this. I can understand getting several accounts that are easy to qualify for and have low limits as part of a rebuilding strategy; you want to have newly established clean tradelines reporting positive history. I can understand coming out of rebuilding mode and apping for better cards; I just went through that. I came out of rebuilding mode and apped for four cards on the same day -- for me, this is a full-blown app spree. But, each card has a specific purpose in my wallet and is a card that I want to keep long term. In this case, I believed that getting them all at once and allowing them to age together made sense. But getting cards just for the sake of getting cards? This doesn't make sense to me. I like my cards to have purpose and to make sense in the context of an overall credit portfolio.