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For Donald Trump YES, for me NO. I was thrilled to get 5k w/nfcu and estatic to get it bumped to 7k!
@phillyguy12 wrote:
3001+ i wanna make babbies with you
Good Morning Philly, and thanks for making me laugh. hahahahahaha.
My Amex Optima with $500 CL, now that's a toy limit for me but at the time, I was just happy to be in with Amex again after so many years without one. lol
5K is a great limit. If you manage it well, It open up doors to higher limits soon.
CHeck out my siggy. That should say whether 5K is a toy limit =D
@SunriseEarth wrote:
@DigitalArk wrote:In general speaking.
I really hate that term. At this point in my credit journey, I was pleased to get my cards with $250 limits. Back before my BK, I had 5 TLs with over $7000 limits and the highest was $11K. Looking back, AMEX was the only one who didn't indugle my desire for big limits and they were clearly correct.
Yes, there are plenty of people in a financial and credit position where $5K is just a paltry limit. There are others clawing their way to good credit with a $200 Fingerhut TL. I think it's more encouraging to simply say a card at a given limit doesn't meet one's current credit needs instead of dismissing it as a "toy limit."
I completely agree. IMO, 5k is not a "toy limit". Now, I know a lot of folks make/spend a lot of money, but sometimes this whole "toy limit" thing starts to seem a bit pretentious. If someone can afford to pay off thousands of dollars in charges, in full, each and every month...and then some, and meet all their other financial obligations with ease, then I guess 5K is not up to standard, but so what? Also, it depends on what kind of expenses you'll be running through the card.
Why does this question keep coming up? Why does it matter what others consider to be a "toy limit", considering that we all come from and are at different places in our financial journeys? The answers will vary, so there really is no "right" answer. To be honest, I hope I never get to the place where I can dismiss 5K as a "toy", but I'm fine with those who can and do. Each person needs to look at their own individual financial situation - their income, expenses, savings, goals, etc. and determine what limit best suits their situation.
On a recent similar thread, someone made the great point that it also depends on the card, giving the example of a Starbucks card (where $500 is more than enough for most people) vs an international airline card, where $500 isn't enough to buy a ticket.
I take home 14K a year, so a 5K card could easily cover 4 months of living. lol