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@Anonymous wrote:
I would let a portion show depending on the card, and never really let utilization show very high. Cards that I have like chase, and Citi didn’t have an introductory 0% APR, so I always paid them before it posted. Not sure if I’m doing this correctly or not. Didn’t want interest eating the perks of the bonuses
You're doing nothing wrong. In my experience and some others as well I think it helps to report at least a significant balance once that is paid off after that way it shows other banks/creditors you can handle a good debt size in relatively short order. Again, not necessary or needed but one I let for any new cards I have report at least once if you're practicing AZEO though I let cards report balances regardless now. Your situation may not allow that until perhaps your cards age more.
Well, now that you have the SUB met and collected it's time to shift gears a bit.
Let things happen organically now and just use them like a "normal" consumer woudl. Charge, report, auto pay.
Since you're 6 months into a 10 card pileup it's safe to say you're doing it right if they haven't done anything yet they probably won't. Now, if you let them sit dormant for awhile it might trigger a reveiw but, as long as there's some use they should all be fine.
@Anonymous wrote:
I was actually nervous to show a big balance this early in the relationship. Afraid they would think I was being wreck less, and threw a red flag. Thank you for the advice. This is a tremendous resource. I’ve recently gotten into the rewards thing, and it’s really addictive lol.
Being serious for a moment here if the temptation is there to apply for more credit consider locking your reports because it can be addicting ![]()
@Anonymous wrote:
I was actually nervous to show a big balance this early in the relationship. Afraid they would think I was being wreck less, and threw a red flag. Thank you for the advice. This is a tremendous resource. I’ve recently gotten into the rewards thing, and it’s really addictive lol.
They know what you're doing when they SP AR your reports to update your balances each month anyway. Nothing is really hidden but, it's less apparent for scoring purposes. I do a slew of bonuses at this point waiting for timers to reset on the bigger lenders and the new cards don't really expect to see it PIF before the statment cuts anyway. Some make it difficult to pay before a statement cuts unless you have a deposit account w/ them already like WF.
Take it in stride and at a minimum give things 6 months from the last approval to cool down and let the dust settle. The 6 months isn't really to avoid issues but to clean the clock for the too many inquiries denials that come w/ such activity. (credit seeking)
@Anonymous wrote:
I’ve recently applied, and approved for several credit cards. My credit utilization is very low, but mostly pay them in full monthly. My credit scores are in the 7’s, home owner, truck paid off. Over last six months have acquired: Chase sapphire preferred, Citi premier, Citi DC, AMEX Platinum, and AMEX bcp, bofa premium rewards, and bofa cash rewards, Capital one Quicksilver, Discover it, and lastly Wells Fargo Propel. I have older cards that I’ve had for 20 years, but these are in the l6 months. My question is this... With so many, so soon, am I running the risk of account closure, even though I mainly pay them off monthly? Am I making them nervous?
If you haven't yet encountered any problems with lenders I dont forsee any occuring but I'd strongly advise to garden for a while. The initial SUB chasing is fine I suppose; but my concern would be that you're participating in several rewards programs - cashback, BofA points, Citi Thank You points, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Wells Fargo points, and Amex Membership Rewards - that are totally different and may not optimize your spending.
@Anonymous wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
I’ve recently applied, and approved for several credit cards. My credit utilization is very low, but mostly pay them in full monthly. My credit scores are in the 7’s, home owner, truck paid off. Over last six months have acquired: Chase sapphire preferred, Citi premier, Citi DC, AMEX Platinum, and AMEX bcp, bofa premium rewards, and bofa cash rewards, Capital one Quicksilver, Discover it, and lastly Wells Fargo Propel. I have older cards that I’ve had for 20 years, but these are in the l6 months. My question is this... With so many, so soon, am I running the risk of account closure, even though I mainly pay them off monthly? Am I making them nervous?If you haven't yet encountered any problems with lenders I dont forsee any occuring but I'd strongly advise to garden for a while. The initial SUB chasing is fine I suppose but my concern would be that you're participating in several rewards programs - cashback, BofA points, Citi Thank You points, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Wells Fargo points, and Amex Membership Rewards - that are totally different and may not optimize your spending.
This is a valid point but I think in the case of SUB chasing it's fine initially to get a nice chunk of points for spend you already had and see how you're going to use them. From there a person can evaulate what options there are with how they spend it and adjust accordingly whether that means possible product changes or even closing of accounts to thin the herd out and keep the rewards programs you want.
@Anonymous wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
I’ve recently applied, and approved for several credit cards. My credit utilization is very low, but mostly pay them in full monthly. My credit scores are in the 7’s, home owner, truck paid off. Over last six months have acquired: Chase sapphire preferred, Citi premier, Citi DC, AMEX Platinum, and AMEX bcp, bofa premium rewards, and bofa cash rewards, Capital one Quicksilver, Discover it, and lastly Wells Fargo Propel. I have older cards that I’ve had for 20 years, but these are in the l6 months. My question is this... With so many, so soon, am I running the risk of account closure, even though I mainly pay them off monthly? Am I making them nervous?If you haven't yet encountered any problems with lenders I dont forsee any occuring but I'd strongly advise to garden for a while. The initial SUB chasing is fine I suppose; but my concern would be that you're participating in several rewards programs - cashback, BofA points, Citi Thank You points, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Wells Fargo points, and Amex Membership Rewards - that are totally different and may not optimize your spending.
I think this is a valid point that doesn't get mentioned often enough. People end up in a dozen reward programs, at which point you aren't maximzing anything and you're just diluting your benefit. SUB aside, I think it's hard if not impossible to justify so many programs.