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I have a Amex ED and BCE
When I got the ED I had a APR of 17.24% but with recent rises my APR is at 17.99 and my BCE at 20.99, and Amex dosent what to give a APR reduction to my ED card, and Im thinking on closing the BCE when my 0% intro ends
What Ideas do you guys have? Tell your comments
This is the second time they rise everyones APR's in under 4 months





Two things
Nothing you can do about rising APRs. Best to PIF monthly when possible and keep that 0% rate rolling. The only APRs I pay attention to are Home loans and Auto loans. CC interest can be avoided entirely in most cases.
Easy solution, IMO: find a CU that offers low-APR cards (preferably fixed-rate cards), and apply for those. True there are no guarantees of course that the CUs won't eventually raise the fixed-rate APRs, but at least you also have the security of knowing that any existing balances incurred before a RJ will stay specifically at their pre-RJ fixed interest rates for the lifetime of the balance. Even a CU with low-APR cards with variable rates are preferable to cards with high APRs. There are at least several CUs that offer cards like these that anyone can app for, some also with rewards included. I very politely and respectfully disagree that APRs are not and are never important, even though FWIW I also do prefer to PIF on almost all of my cards, with only a few rare non-PIF exceptions that are ultra-low APRs.
@CommanderLexa wrote:Two things
- I wouldn't really concern myself with the APR on rewards cards. Realistically, do you expect to carry a balance on the card(s)?
- If the APR is your only reason for closing it/them, I would keep them. At least Amex is a lender that will lower APRs; others, like Capital One, keep the same APR for the life of the card.
I ditto what she's saying here. Since they're reward cards you typically wouldn't want to carry a balance on them anyways to maximize your earnings whether through points or cash back. Otherwise you're shorting yourself doing so. And also like she pointed out AMEX is willing to lower your APR on your card(s) in the future; other lenders what APR you get is what you're stuck with more or less. For proof here's a post not too long ago about a user who got an APR reduction automatically from AMEX.
http://ficoforums.myfico.com/t5/Credit-Cards/Amex-Auto-APR-Reduction/td-p/4967149
@AverageJoesCredit wrote:
Closing a card because they wont lower an apr seems to me to be silly. If the card doesnt fit your spend or lifestyle, sure move on. Amex is not really a lender who lowers Apr too much. Try paying in full and apr will become a mute issue. Just my take on it
It dosent fit my lifestyle
(The BCE)





Yeah if it doesn't fit your lifestyle.. close it. Can you roll the limit over to your other Amex card after a certain amount of time?
@Gmood1 wrote:Yeah if it doesn't fit your lifestyle.. close it. Can you roll the limit over to your other Amex card after a certain amount of time?
Yes, When I was approved for the BCE I was approved for 2K so I moved 1K to my ED




