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Multple payments in one month. Does it help?

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Anonymous
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Re: Multple payments in one month. Does it help?

ahhh I think we have some possibly outdated info here, that was true a year or two ago.  These accounts will show as felexible spending, yes, and like other cards you can see the high balances, yes, but you still see the total credit limit.
this was back when people were trying to downgrade their cards because the scoring model was different then, and these flexible spending cards were a little different, er a lot different, in scoring.
Message 11 of 14
Anonymous
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Re: Multple payments in one month. Does it help?


@Anonymous wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

I dont think it helps or hurts. 95% of my charges I pay instantly or the next day. My checking account looks a hot mess, but this way I keep track of everything daily.  I know its overkill. I just dont like pending charges on cards or how they take so long to post. This way I know my balance every minute.

 

Do what works best for you.  If you need to manage your money and avoid debt, and paying off your cards weekly or daily helps, then go for it. But dont go paying more than once a month to help your score. Its WHEN you pay that matters most (before statment cut date, not the due date).  I would say how much you pay matters a little less once you have higher limits.


I use the same strategy and pay off my charges as soon as they are posted.  However, I was recently informed that one of the key factors adversely affecting
my credit score is " No recent revolving balance."

 

Do you think it is a good idea to leave a small balance on one card at the statement date and then pay it right after the statement closes?


If your goal is to maximize your score because you're looking to buy a home or car (for example) then keeping your utilization low can be helpful. However not allowing any balances to report on a credit card can have a negative impact on your score.

Message 12 of 14
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Multple payments in one month. Does it help?


@Anonymous wrote:
ahhh I think we have some possibly outdated info here, that was true a year or two ago.  These accounts will show as felexible spending, yes, and like other cards you can see the high balances, yes, but you still see the total credit limit.
this was back when people were trying to downgrade their cards because the scoring model was different then, and these flexible spending cards were a little different, er a lot different, in scoring.

Thank you for clarifying!  I almost tried to downgrade too just to have my CL show Smiley Happy Sorry for sharing outdated info

Message 13 of 14
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Multple payments in one month. Does it help?


@Anonymous wrote:

@Mattopotamus wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

I dont think it helps or hurts. 95% of my charges I pay instantly or the next day. My checking account looks a hot mess, but this way I keep track of everything daily.  I know its overkill. I just dont like pending charges on cards or how they take so long to post. This way I know my balance every minute.

 

Do what works best for you.  If you need to manage your money and avoid debt, and paying off your cards weekly or daily helps, then go for it. But dont go paying more than once a month to help your score. Its WHEN you pay that matters most (before statment cut date, not the due date).  I would say how much you pay matters a little less once you have higher limits.


I use the same strategy and pay off my charges as soon as they are posted.  However, I was recently informed that one of the key factors adversely affecting
my credit score is " No recent revolving balance."

 

Do you think it is a good idea to leave a small balance on one card at the statement date and then pay it right after the statement closes?


The best thing to do is always have one card report a balance (let a statement cut) so you have utlitzation.  I have 3 cards that I use on a regualr basis.  Two of those cards I pay off as soon as the charges change from pending to posted.  The 3rd card I actually let cut a statement so my utlization shows between 1-2%.  If you are not letting any payments post you are not hurting your scores, but you are also not maximizing your potential. 

 

This is why I am not a big fan of charge cards, unless you have another card you actually let cut a statement.  For me, my everyday card is what I let cut a statement. 


Thanks, that makes sense as far as revolving accounts go.  I am scared to let a balance post on my BofA Cash Rewards because it has recently become a Visa Signature and flexible spending account - which I believe reports the high balance, rather than the credit limit?  I feel there are so many variables that it is easy to be tricked when you try to follow the best strategy for you.


IIRC CCC used to report information this way, but they don't anymore. There are several older threads that discuss this issue.

Message 14 of 14
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