No credit card required
Browse credit cards from a variety of issuers to see if there's a better card for you.
You can use the preapproval forms online if that bank has one. They will generally give you a range that varies on your score, and others just have one rate. Preapprovals don't hurt your score and normally only ask a few questions. I do find it strange with the time frame you were given though.
@CreditInspired wrote:
4 weeks? Sounds like manual review is being done in the stone ages😂. I don't think it matters whether it's in the branch or online. I think in the branch is good if there are other issues involved. I'll keep my fingers crossed for you and welcome to MyFICO.
Thank you very much. The bank is first national bank if that matters
The general rule of thumb - I first came across it with Discover but it applies to a lot of other lenders too - is that the more specific the APR quote is, the better your chances of being approved are. When you try out a lender's pre-approval site, what you're looking for is either a small range between lowest and highest APR's (a difference of 3% to 4%), or, even better, a single-figure quote such as the one you cited in the OP. If you get an 8% or 10% spread between lowest and highest APR's, you can generally take it as a given that what you've gotten is a pure marketing offer; you might get approved if you apply, certainly, but at that point, with figures like that, you apply at your own risk. It's pretty odd that the bank would need to take 4 weeks to do a manual review, but if your credit reports and scores are overall good, I'd say optimism is warranted.
UPDATE-
I saw a tab on my online banking on the First National Bank website that said Application Status. I entered my information and it said I was approved for 2,500! Does anyone know if it's manually reviewed after that, or does that mean the manual review is already complete?
It will be my first non-secured card, so I'm excited if it's final ![]()