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So, as most of us know by now, keeping cards around unused seems to be a terrible idea, what with the surge of account closings, inactivity fees, and so on.
Here's my question. Should I be content to charge just a few bucks on a card before sock drawering it for the month, or will I benefit more if I get closer to that ideal 9% utilization before paying it off in full? My understanding is that the companies want to see responsible credit use, so in theory at least they want to see me flex my spending power a bit. Anyone have advice on this?
p.s. - Sorry if this has already been covered, I didn't see any info on this in stickies or a search.
@Anonymous wrote:So, as most of us know by now, keeping cards around unused seems to be a terrible idea, what with the surge of account closings, inactivity fees, and so on.
Here's my question. Should I be content to charge just a few bucks on a card before sock drawering it for the month, or will I benefit more if I get closer to that ideal 9% utilization before paying it off in full? My understanding is that the companies want to see responsible credit use, so in theory at least they want to see me flex my spending power a bit. Anyone have advice on this?
p.s. - Sorry if this has already been covered, I didn't see any info on this in stickies or a search.
Hello and welcome to the forums.
I can only relate my experience. I use each of my cards to pay a recurring monthly expense (cable bill, electricity, etc.) that I would have to pay anyway so that all the cards show usage each month and I don't have to think about which one I need to use to show activity. The amounts range from $16 to about $100 spread across the cards. So I never show heavy usage on any of them and it doesn't seem to matter to the CCC's. At least not up to this point. Others may have a different story.
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@MarineVietVet wrote:
I can only relate my experience. I use each of my cards to pay a recurring monthly expense (cable bill, electricity, etc.) that I would have to pay anyway so that all the cards show usage each month and I don't have to think about which one I need to use to show activity. The amounts range from $16 to about $100 spread across the cards. So I never show heavy usage on any of them and it doesn't seem to matter to the CCC's. At least not up to this point. Others may have a different story.
Same plus I use them for regular charitable donations. Works well for me, and I know exactly how much will be charged on each card and I don't have to carry them around
Thanks guys, I won't overthink it then, and simply stick to my one charge a month on each card.
I would use a card about three times a year. Keep the balance small I try to keep mine 5% or less of the credit limit. I would make sure to use the card(s) that you have had the longest. I always pay in full each month and I do not worry about if a balcne reports or not.
Put yourself in the mindset of the capitalist who is your CC company.
They want to make money on the card. Inactive cards = no profit.
If you show zero usage over an extended period, they see no profit in you, and may slash your CL, or even close the card.
It costs them admin $$ to keep your account open.
I would make at least one charge every month or two, forcing a regualr billing statement with balance from them, and then just PIF before the statement due date.
No interest due, and activity is then shown on the account.
I speculate that their account review software looks for accounts with no balance and no billing activity, say, for around three months, and then flags that account as a no-profit account.
My lower CL and lower balance CCs dont bombard me with balance transfer offers, convenience check offers, etc., nearly as frequently as my higher CL and higher % util cards do. They monitor your usage, and seek out those that keep % util low, and thus wth low repayment risk, but also those who use it frequently, and are thus most likely to acccrue monthly interest by making less than a full PIF each month, while also not having a high % util that demonstrates a potential repayment risk.
Use it or lose it.
Don't apply for more cards than you will actually use. I find no problems in rotating 4 cards. 5 iffen you include Walmart. I don't know how anyone can rotate 10 cards unless some see some business usage. I was an early victim of CLD when I had "too many cards". I just don't charge enough to warrant carrying that many cards anymore.
I agree with smallfry.
Juggling anything more than 5 CCs becomes a nightmare. FICO scores you on % util of each card, as well as the number of cards showing any balance.
If you are an extreme bookeeper, then by all means, have 20 cards.
Then monitor, monthly the % util on 20 cards, and the number of those 20 that report any monthly balance. Then how long each has been in disuse, to avoid a CL decrease or account closing.
No thanks!
5 cards is my monitoring limit!
marinevet, that is exactly how I use my cards.
I schedule recurring monthly payments agaisnt each, which maintains regular billing on each card, and I just then PIF a few days before the billing due date.
No interest.
Account used, and active, monthly.
Recurring small monthly charges may not be enough to keep a line open. I was a victim of massive CLD on my Barclays card even though I put 200-300 on the card every month. Same happened on my Citi Pro card. If you have small limit cards you will probably be OK but if your limits are into 5 figures they might not be safe.