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Credit Card Cash Advances

by Muller Lukacs SEO King
While a credit card will pay for most things these days there are always times that call for good old fashioned cash. Most of the time you would probably access cash from an ATM using a cash card linked directly to your bank account. However, if your bank account funds are running low or the ATM in the location you are in won't accept your card then an option to access cash might be using your credit card to get a cash advance via an ATM machine. Some banks even offer credit card checks which can be used to pay for items but are treated like a cash advance, not a normal credit card purchase.

Should you be concerned about that?

There's no question about it, belk credit card cash advances can act as a very valuable feature. Anyone traveling overseas and stuck for cash will be grateful of the lifeline is provides. Your credit card allows you to get a cash advance anywhere around the world, from locations as convenient as the ubiquitous ATM machine.

Before you start making credit card cash advances there are things you need to know. Generally, a cash advance will cost you more than the purchases you charge on your credit card. Consider the following:

Finance charge: There are cards that bend the rules but you will find a cash advance with most cards attract a higher APR than purchase rates. This is very typical even with low interest credit cards. For example, a low interest credit card from an Australian bank has a cash advance rate of 18.75 percent (as at March 12, 2008), while the purchase rate is 12.99 percent. Be aware that the difference in interest rates can be very significant.

There is a reason for this. The credit card issuer earns some income from your purchases because merchants pay fees to process and receive payments for the transactions. A merchant is not involved in a cash advance transaction, so the credit card issuer does not earn fees.

Grace period: Credit card issuers normally grant a grace period on purchases, and charge interest on these only if you don't pay off the amount when it falls due. A cash advance does not get such grace period, and interest is charged from day one. A $500 credit card purchase could cost nothing in interest if you paid the bill in full on its due date; a $500 cash advance at 18 percent APR paid in full after one month would require you to pay $7.50 interest.

Special fee: Card issuers often charge a cash advance transaction fee, shown as a percentage of the cash advance made. Usually, the fee ranges from 2 to 3 percent, but with a minimum fee (e.g. $10). In the example above, you would pay $10-$15 (2-3 percent) as transaction fee on the $500 cash advance.

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About Muller Lukacs Advanced   SEO King

67 connections, 3 recommendations, 198 honor points.
Joined APSense since, November 25th, 2017, From Karachi, Pakistan.

Created on Apr 23rd 2020 06:50. Viewed 310 times.

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