No credit card required
Browse credit cards from a variety of issuers to see if there's a better card for you.
Well... the OP certainly started his first day posting with a bang.
The OP no doubt has this all figured out!
Seriously, though, these blanket statement type posts are never going to apply to ever profile.
@Anonymouswrote:
thats like walking into a bank and asking for 25K loan with a bank you never done business and you never have previous loans with any other institutions, if you have a mortgage, car loan, personal loan, with any company your success rate is higher of being approves with banks you already had did business with in the past.......and thats goes with credit card too.
That's why we have credit reports and credit scores.
@Anonymouswrote:
my statement is not blanket...... what im saying is it takes time to build a relationship with a bank. get one card build credit limit up, apply for another card with the same issuer of your previous card build that card and the previous card you already have.
So in layman term, build your history with one bank at a time.......before going to several different banks.........it's really easy.....to understand.....would you loan money to friend that always paid you back no matter what or would you loan money to a friend who who doesn't pay anybody back......the friend that pay you pack.....make you more comfortable loaning them money because that friend pays his debt.......same method banks uses
I've had banks give me $20k+ starting lines with no previous relationship and I've had banks give me low $5k starting lines with a long-established relationship. You really lost me with the last part, though. That's not really describing being rewarded by a bank for your relationship over time with them; that's just maintaining positive credit history which along with the ability to repay is most of what lenders are looking for.
My average was somewhere between $7K and $8K when Chase approved me for $15.7K.
Now your formula is sometimes used in business credit. You don't want to be the highest, nor the lowest. Somewhere in between to build a relationship.
Again, OP, your statements are of the blanket variety and cannot be applied to every situation, as evidenced by the replies you're getting from members above that aren't in line with what you're saying.
One more data point -- in December, I had an average limit of 10K/card, over 4 cards.
Chase issued a CSP to me with a limit of 19 (which I subsequently reduced, but that's another story).
EQ | 841 | 5 INQ (Auto, CC, HELOC, 2 mort) | 7y2m |
EX | 812 | 5 INQ (2 CC, 2 mort, HELoan) | 6y11m |
TU | 829 | 4 INQ (3 CC, 1 mort) | 6y6m |
5/24 | 3/12 | AoYA 0m | AoOA 23y6m | ~3% |