Should You Have Lots of Credit Cards
You know it’s true: You’ve been
tempted by credit card sign up bonuses in the past. And you’ve maybe even
signed up for a credit card solely for the sign up bonus… and then cancelled
it? Or have you been scared that opening up or cancelling lots of credit cards
in your thirties could hurt your credit score?
There’s a lot of mixed
information in this area that might leave you puzzled. Here’s the deal:
credit cards can be really helpful and pretty benevolent unless you can’t use
them wisely. It’s like anything: if you develop an unhealthy (overspending)
addiction, you need to stay away. Otherwise, proceed wisely and happily. There
are lots of benefits to having multiple credit cards.
Here are some tips for having various
credit cards in your thirties:
1.
Pay
your credit cards off in full every month
This is pretty self-explanatory, but
the real trick to benefiting from credit cards, and especially from having
multiple credit cards, is to make sure you pay the full balance off every
month, not just the minimum. If you can’t pay the full balance off every month,
stay with fewer credit cards until you can. Sign up bonuses and points aren’t
worth the crazy expensive interest charges you’ll have to pay if you rack up
debt.
2. Don’t cancel the random credit cards you
opened in your early twenties
Part of your credit score is
calculated based on length of credit history. If you cancel the first card you
ever opened, you’re shortening your credit history, and this will hurt your
credit score. Unless a card has a high annual fee that you don’t want to pay,
there’s no reason to cancel. If you don’t want to use the card anymore, pay it
off and cut it up.
3. If you’re opening multiple cards for a point
bonus, make sure you can meet the minimum spend in the correct amount of time
If
there’s an American Airlines card that will give you 50,000 miles when you
spend 3,000 in 3 months, make sure, if you get the card, that you’re gonna
spend the 3000 in 3 months. I’ve screwed this one up before and have actually
forgotten to meet the minimum. Put all your other cards away and solely use
that one for awhile. If you can pay major bills, like your rent, on your credit
card, you should be able to easily meet the minimum. There are actually
services that can help you do this
4. If you can meet multiple minimums at once, it’s
best to open more than one card on the same day
Even if you have great credit, you’re
more likely to get denied for a card if you open a new card every few weeks.
I’ve actually opened and been approved for three cards in one day (I’m really
good with credit cards and pay them off in full every month). If I’d opened one
card and then waited a week to apply for the next card, I would have probably
gotten denied. Wait at least 90 days to apply for the next credit card(s).
5. You won’t ruin your credit from having multiple
cards
In fact, the opposite is true. Your
credit score is partially calculated from something called a debt-to-credit
ratio. If you have more credit available, you’ll have a better ratio.
6. You won’t ruin your credit from cancelling a
card
If a card has a high annual fee and
it’s not worth keeping, go ahead and cancel it. Your score will only drop a
tiny bit from your lowered debt to credit ratio. And it will come back up again
as you continue using your remaining cards wisely. The annual fees aren’t
always worth keeping the credit card. The only
exception to this rule is if you cancel your oldest card- that will definitely
lower your score more than the others because it will change your length of
credit history.
Source: https://medium.com/@anilsurma333/should-you-have-lots-of-credit-cards-149ea92dd614#.c2dx1j4fl
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