Recently applied for a PayPal Credit account, having 719 Experian FICO and 16% UTI.
Approved for $3250 SL.
Initially ran $2,000 through it. Then attempted to grow the credit line with another $2,000 and denied by algo.
So I broke up the second purchase. Did a transacton for $1500, approved. Another for $500, approved. Just five minutes later.
Thought this was an interesting data point for anyone who is trying to grow their credit limit with PayPal via purchase.
PS -- If you're married, e.g., this is a hidden trade line that you can tap like a cash advance with 0% interest for 6 months and a 2.9% fee, by invoicing from another PayPal account. Useful for improving overall utilization and smoothing out income received periodically.
@Anonymouswrote:Recently applied for a PayPal Credit account, having 719 Experian FICO and 16% UTI.
Approved for $3250 SL.
Initially ran $2,000 through it. Then attempted to grow the credit line with another $2,000 and denied by algo.
So I broke up the second purchase. Did a transacton for $1500, approved. Another for $500, approved. Just five minutes later.
Thought this was an interesting data point for anyone who is trying to grow their credit limit with PayPal via purchase.
PS -- If you're married, e.g., this is a hidden trade line that you can tap like a cash advance with 0% interest for 6 months and a 2.9% fee, by invoicing from another PayPal account. Useful for improving overall utilization and smoothing out income received periodically.
Congrats on the do and CLIs.
I’d highly recommend not using PPC to send money to another PP account of yours. Many people have had their accounts shut down for doing so.
@Anonymouswrote:
@Anonymouswrote:Recently applied for a PayPal Credit account, having 719 Experian FICO and 16% UTI.
Approved for $3250 SL.
Initially ran $2,000 through it. Then attempted to grow the credit line with another $2,000 and denied by algo.
So I broke up the second purchase. Did a transacton for $1500, approved. Another for $500, approved. Just five minutes later.
Thought this was an interesting data point for anyone who is trying to grow their credit limit with PayPal via purchase.
PS -- If you're married, e.g., this is a hidden trade line that you can tap like a cash advance with 0% interest for 6 months and a 2.9% fee, by invoicing from another PayPal account. Useful for improving overall utilization and smoothing out income received periodically.
Congrats on the do and CLIs.
I’d highly recommend not using PPC to send money to another PP account of yours. Many people have had their accounts shut down for doing so.
Good to know. I imagine that wouldn't apply if you send money to a different account, like wife's account for instance?
@imaximouswrote:
@Anonymouswrote:
@Anonymouswrote:Recently applied for a PayPal Credit account, having 719 Experian FICO and 16% UTI.
Approved for $3250 SL.
Initially ran $2,000 through it. Then attempted to grow the credit line with another $2,000 and denied by algo.
So I broke up the second purchase. Did a transacton for $1500, approved. Another for $500, approved. Just five minutes later.
Thought this was an interesting data point for anyone who is trying to grow their credit limit with PayPal via purchase.
PS -- If you're married, e.g., this is a hidden trade line that you can tap like a cash advance with 0% interest for 6 months and a 2.9% fee, by invoicing from another PayPal account. Useful for improving overall utilization and smoothing out income received periodically.
Congrats on the do and CLIs.
I’d highly recommend not using PPC to send money to another PP account of yours. Many people have had their accounts shut down for doing so.
Good to know. I imagine that wouldn't apply if you send money to a different account, like wife's account for instance?
All depends. If they tie the 2 accounts to the same address then there’s a good chance they won’t let you send the money using PPC. I tried once to send some to my g/fs account and it wouldn’t go thru. We live at same address. They have no way of knowing if you’re just using wife’s account as your own.