Reduce The Interest Rates On Your Credit Cards

By Robertson Erin

I read a great article on the impact credit card interest rates have on your credit and how Credit Card debt can destroy your wealth potential.  The article (6 steps to reducing your credit card interest rates) was written by Jay Peroni and was reprinted  on ChristianPF.com.

Step 1: Find out your current interest rates on your credit cards.

Step 2: Shop around and find what competing cards are charging for interest.

Step 3: Call your credit card companies and ask to speak to a supervisor or manager. Use competitor rates to negotiate your rate down. Keep escalating your request up to the next manager if you do not get the answer you are looking for from the first manager you talk to. Be persistent. Don’t back down.

Step 4: While you are at it, negotiate to have your late fees reversed. This is also negotiable. Be prepared to fight back.

Step 5: Set up your future payments to that company to be made au­tomatically. Either use a bill-payment company or have your monthly payments scheduled to automatically hit before their respective due dates.

Step 6: Continue making the largest monthly payment you can make—above the minimum payment.

Read the rest of the article here.

categoriacredit repair commento1 Comment dataJanuary 21st, 2010
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9 Places You Can Save Money For Your Family

By Robertson Erin

Most families are spending more and more money every year (and not just because the cost of living rose) while also saving less and less. One reason is that few household managers spend much time reviewing expenses and expenditures to find ways they can save money. However almost every family has places where costs can be cut and pennies can be pinched — and if those freed up funds are then used to pay down debt and save for the future it could have a dramatic impact on their quality of life.

Food is one big area where many families could be more thrifty. Families spend an average of $2,434 on food away from home, according to the Consumer Expenditure Survey from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. If you (and your spouse and your children) eat lunch out every day of the week then try brown-bagging at least one of those days. If just one of you does it you may save up to $400 a year and if you can double or triple that savings you could finance a family vacation with it.

Another major expense is your home. When was the last time you looked at refinancing? Can you find a lower interest rate? Can you renegotiate to a shorter time frame? Even if you can’t change your mortgage payment you may be able to pay a bit extra each month which over time will help pay down your mortgage faster. Also, don’t overlook your utilities. There are ways to save in this area as well including updating your insulation and weather stripping, keeping up-to-date with maintenance and cleaning of your furnace and air conditioner or using a programmable thermostat to take advantage of those times when your house is empty or the family is asleep.

Transportation is another major expense for many families. Not only are vehicles expensive to buy but also to maintain and operate especially with gasoline prices at such high levels. Is carpooling an option for any members of the family on at least a part-time basis? Make sure to combine errands and trips to cut down on your travel and save money when buying gasoline by taking advantage of special programs and discounts and remaining vigilant about gas prices. In addition, following a regular maintenance schedule and proper tire inflation can also help you achieve maximum gas mileage for your vehicle.

Choosing your bank wisely can be another way to save money. Make sure the bank you use offers free (or at least low cost) checking as well as electronic bill-paying. Electronic bill-paying and a debit card can cut down on your need to use checks and postage which will save you in the long run as well as help you better manage payments so you will avoid fees, penalties, and higher interest rates.

Cutting your credit card costs can be another major savings. This means making sure you are using the best possible credit card with a low interest rate and low or no annual fee. Shop around until you find your perfect match and don’t forget to cancel and cut up those rejected suitors.

Health care is not really an area where you can cut expenses but you can save money by taking advantage of special offers and programs. For example, many employers offer a Flexible Spending Account where you can save money before taxes for out-of-pocket medical expenses for prescription and nonprescription drugs, dental expenses, and eye care.

Tuning up your insurance policies can also help you save money. When did you last compare rates for your home, your vehicles, and yourself? Some other ways to cut costs are to raise your deductible level or using the same company for multiple coverage (your home and vehicles). When you are shopping around make sure to give your current company a shot at keeping you. Sometimes they can offer a better rate too.

Another major expense for many families is the cost of communication including local and long distance phone service, cell phones, cable or satellite television, and Internet access. Review your expenditures and cut out the services you don’t need. Can some of these expenses be bundled to save money? Are there better plans for your needs?

When looking to save money it is important to become an aggressive shopper. The Internet makes it possible today to compare prices and product reviews while not spending a lot of time and money driving from store to store. Any big ticket item (and that includes your weekly groceries, cleaning products and health and beauty aids) deserves a closer study.

Over the next, month take time to review your family expenses and expenditures in each of these nine areas. Making a few alterations in your family’s spending habits will soon make a difference in the overall household budget. You can raise your family’s quality of life by making just a few changes in your monthly budget.

categoriaTips to Save commentoNo Comments dataNovember 21st, 2009
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5 Things To Protect Your Credit Score This Holiday Season

By Robertson Erin

1. Avoid Department Store Offers for Instant Credit and Don’t Open Up New Lines of Credit

“Would you like to save 10% today on your purchase today?”. We have all been asked that question when paying for our purchases. Every store under the sun would like to offer you their own credit card. This is not good for your score. The damage to your score you’ll incur by opening up a new line of credit is just not worth the few dollars you might save. Department score credit is poor quality credit and the credit scoring system frowns on it. Just don’t apply for the card. You may want or need to apply for a new car loan, a new home loan, a re-finance a home loan. By applying for store credit to save a couple of dollars, you could be hurting your chance of getting an important loan at a good rate until the middle of next year.

2. Avoid Overspending

Spending affects credit. 30% of your credit score is made up of how you manage your debt, and when your credit card balances exceed 30% of their available limit, the credit scoring system red flags you and your score goes down instantly. The logic behind this is that if you suddenly max out your credit cards, it looks to the system as though you are in financial trouble. Only charge if you can pay the balance in full before the next statement date. Plus, overspending and overcharging will also cause you to carry larger balances longer. It is best to keep your balances low at all times.

3. Pay Your Bills On Time

Payment history is 35% of your credit score. One 30-day late can cost you 50 points or more. December is traditionally the busiest time of the year. Active calendars filled with work and social commitments for family and friends and the frenzy of the season can preoccupy you and cause you to be late in paying your bills. Make staying on top of your bills a priority. Put all of your bills in a file and make sure you pay them on time. In doing so, you will save points on your credit score and ridiculous late charges as much as $39 or more. Additionally, when you are late in paying your bills, you nullify any preferential finance rate and your account will default to a dramatically higher interest rate. A ding to your credit score, a high late fee, and a huge increase in interest rates are all big incentives to make sure you are on time with your bills. I recently got a call from a customer who had been late, but not 30 days late and the rate jumped on his card to over 30% annually!

4. Take the Time to Plan and Prepare Your Gift Giving

We all do it. We walk into a store ready to buy a specific item and end up getting lured into a spending vortex. Panic spending because the store does not have the item you went in to buy; deciding that if you buy this item for this person, then you have to buy this item for another person; succumbing to the temptation of the latest must-have gadget. You can prevent this well-woven retailer trap by doing your research online. By preparing before you even darken the automatic doorstep of the alluring retail establishment, you can determine where you can purchase specific items and for what price. In doing so, you can avoid the retail traps and retain control of your spending (and your sanity). Online shopping sites have grown tremendously in popularity. Traffic to those sites is up more than 30% from just last year. There is a wealth of information on the web. In fact, www.pricegrabber.com lists all of the hottest holiday items and tells you who sells them and for how much. Remember, if you pay your credit card bill prior to the statement date, it will help your scores. www.froogle.com is another great site to find the item for less.

5. Manage Your Credit Wisely

Keep track of your credit card balances and keep them as low as possible. Studies show that as consumers increase their credit card balances, they become increasingly apathetic about their balances and even about adding new debt. By tracking balances, you will maintain a sense of control over your credit score and your finances. Write out a chart of who you owe, how much you owe, and what the minimum payment is. It will help you to get a handle on your bills, and help start planning how to pay them off.

categoriacredit repair commentoNo Comments dataNovember 6th, 2009
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Bad Credit Loans Don’t Have To Be Out Of Reach

By Robertson Erin

Those with bad credit no longer have to forego loans. These days when bad credit is more the norm then a great credit rating banks and lenders are now offering a number of ways to obtain loans even if your credit scores are low.

One way to get a credit loan even if your scores are low is a secured loan. Secured loans are loans that require the person requesting the loan to make a deposit into a secured account in order to have collateral for the money loaned. Usually credit cards become available for those with lower credit ratings with this method. It works like this; the person wanting a credit card opens an account at a stated bank and deposits up to $500 in to the account. Then, minus a fee for the card, the bank issues a credit card with a credit limit matching the deposit made. The card is then used like a credit card however it is “secured” with the funds in the account. You can’t take the funds out of the account because they are there incase you default on payment for the card.

A second way you can get a loan with bad credit is through higher interest rates. Banks and lenders can loan on high risk loans if they apply a higher interest rate. This ensures that the bank gets their money back and then some. The interest rate on these loans can sometimes be as high as 30 percent but it does allow you to at least get the loan and hopefully, if paid back right, help you heal your credit.

These types of loans as well as many others are out there but you have to do the research to find them. The internet helps in a huge way but if you don’t have access to the internet you can still call the better business bureau for a list of high risk lenders or your local Chamber of Commerce may have so sources. Either way these types of loans are out there and can help those who are having a hard time finding that bank or lender willing to take a chance on them.

categoriacredit repair commentoNo Comments dataNovember 5th, 2009
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Bad Credit Credit Report Repair – Why Do It Yourself?

By Robertson Erin

A credit report is a powerful piece of paper. Lenders look at it closely when deciding whether or not to give you a loan. Insurance companies can use it to determine your rates or whether they will cover you at all. Employers can access it and use it as a factor in offering you a job or promotion.

With that much significance placed on your credit report, it is absolutely essential that the information it contains paints you in a good light.

Repairing your credit yourself saves you money

According to the Fair Credit Reporting Act, consumers can dispute mistakes in their credit report for free. It can be a little time consuming to pull your report, document the error, type up a letter and send it in, so many people hire credit repair agencies to do the boring work for them. There is no real reason, other than the issue of time, to pour out money for work that you can easily do yourself.

There are no secret tricks to credit repair

Don’t be fooled into thinking that you don’t have the knowledge to clean up your credit report and that a credit repair agency knows a bunch of angles that have eluded you. Everything you need to know in order to fix errors on your credit report is readily available and there is nothing in the process that is required to be done by a third party or professional agency that specializes in credit repair.

Keep yourself from getting scammed

Don’t fall for the ads that claim an agency can erase bad credit from your report. The only thing by law that can be changed on a credit report is inaccurate information. If you have had a bankruptcy, the only thing that will legally remove it from your credit report is time.

Credit repair agencies charge anywhere from $400 to $2000 for their services and the reality is they are not doing anything that you can’t do for yourself. For $30 you can obtain a credit report that lists your history with all three credit bureaus. The rest of the investment in cleaning up your credit report is in the value of the time it requires.

Here is a great place to start:

Credit Repair Magic - Unique Credit Repair Software With Audio And Video–not Just Another E-book. The Worlds Simplest And Best Credit Improvement System

categoriacredit repair commentoNo Comments dataNovember 2nd, 2009
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5 Common Credit Score Myths

By Robertson Erin


Your credit score is an integral part of your financial life. It is important that you understand what it’s all about. Lenders, landlords, insurers, utility companies and even employers look at your credit score. It is derived from what’s in your credit reports, and it ranges between 300 and 850.

Yet, according to a survey that was recently conducted, nearly half of all Americans don’t know how these scores are derived or even what factors are used to come up with them.

For example, if your credit score is 580 you are probably going to pay nearly three percentage points more in mortgage interest(if you can get approved at all) than someone who had a score of 720.

Or another way of looking at it, if you had a $150,000 30- year fixed-rate mortgage and your credit score was good enough to qualify for the best rate, your monthly payments would be about $890. This is according to Fair Isaac, the company that created the FICO score and who the rate is named afte (Fair Isaac COrporation). If your credit is poor, however, it is very likely that you would have to pay more than $1,200 a month for that same loan.

With so much depending on the credit score, it’s important to understand what it is all about and what are the things that affect it.

Unfortunately, people commonly have a lot of misinformation and misunderstandings about their credit score. Here are five of the most common credit score myths and along with it the true facts:

MYTH #1: The major bureaus use different formulas for calculating your credit score.

FACT: The three major credit bureaus – Equifax, TransUnion and Experian — give the score a different name. Equifax calls their score the “Beacon” credit score, Transunion calls it “Empirica” and Experian gives it the name “Experian/Fair Isaac Risk Model.” They all use different names for the credit score, but they all use the same formula to come up with it.

The reason that the credit score you receive from each bureau is different is because the information in your file that they base the score on is different. For example,the records that one bureau is using may go back a longer period of time, or a previous lender may have shared its information with only one of the bureaus and not the other two.

Usually the scores are not too far from each other. Unless there is a big difference between what each bureau says is your credit score, many lenders will just use the one in the middle for the purpose of analyzing your application. So, for this reason alone it is a good idea to correct any errors that exist in each of the three major credit bureaus.

MYTH #2: Paying off your debts is all you need to do to immediately repair your credit score.

FACT: Your credit score is mostly determined by your past performance more than your current amount of debt. It will definitely be very helpful to pay off your credit cards and settle any outstanding loans, but if yours is a history of late or missed payments, it won’t remove the damage overnight. It takes time to repair your credit score.

So definitely pay down your debts. But it is equally important to consistently get in the habit of paying your bills on time.

MYTH #3: Closing old accounts will boost my credit score.

FACT: This is a common misconception. It’s not closing accounts that affects your credit score, it’s opening them. Closing accounts can never help your credit score, and may actually hurt it. Yes, having too many open accounts does hurt your score. But once the accounts have been opened,the damage has already been done. Shutting the account doesn’t repair it and it may actually make things worse.

The credit score is affected by the difference between the credit that is available and the credit that is being used. Shutting down accounts reduces the amount of total credit available and when compared with how much credit you can use your actual credit balances are made to seem larger. This hurts your credit score.

The credit score also looks at the length of your credit history. Shutting older accounts removes old history and can make your credit history look younger than it actually is. This also can hurt your score.

You generally shouldn’t close accounts unless a lender specifically asks you to do so as a condition for them giving you a loan. Instead,the best thing you can do is just pay down your existing credit card debt. That’s something that definitely would improve your credit score.

MYTH #4: Shopping around for a loan will hurt my credit score.

FACT: When a lender makes an inquiry about your credit, your score could drop up to five points. Some borrowers think that if they shop around by going to a number of different lenders that each time a lender does an inquiry it will generate another reduction in the credit score. This isn’t true. For credit score purposes, multiple inquiries for a loan are treated as a single inquiry, as long as they all come within a 45 day period. So it is best to do your rate shopping within this 45 day window.

MYTH #5: Companies can fix my credit score for a fee.

FACT: If the credit bureaus have accurate information, there’s nothing that can be done to quickly improve your score if in fact you have a history of not handling your debts well. The only way to have an effect on your credit score is to show that you can manage your debts in the future.

Also,if there are errors in your file, you can contact the bureau yourself. You don’t need to pay someone else to do it. Each of the major credit bureaus has a website which clearly explains what you need to do to correct an error.

So if you need help take a look at Credit Repair Magic – This is Unique Credit Repair Software With Audio And Video–not Just Another E-book. The Worlds Simplest And Best Credit Improvement System

categoriacredit repair commentoNo Comments dataOctober 21st, 2009
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How to Save Money with a Gas Station Credit Card

By Robertson Erin

Save Money Tips

The average American spends over $2000 a year on gas alone. Gas and fuel is a billion dollar industry. How can we save on gas? There are the usual tips offered to you such as keeping you vehicle well maintained, changing your oil regularly, using public transportation, packing light and combining all your errands into just one trip daily. Unfortunately, obeying these procedures still doesn’t save you enough cash.

Another less known but highly effective opportunity to save is to apply for a gas credit card. There are many benefits of a gasoline credit card that can aid in the amount that we spend solely on gas. Most gasoline credit cards offer cash back and discounts, convenience, reward programs, and a great way to build or rebuild your credit history.

Some gas credit cards offered by well established companies such as Chase, Visa, MasterCard, or Hess offer cash back and discounts on gas purchases which can add up throughout the year to save you big bucks.

Signing up for a gas credit card can also bring you all the conveniences of any regular credit card. You can use them anywhere that accepts credit cards and you don’t have to carry cash around for your big purchases anymore. Most gas stations now even have express lanes where ONLY direct payment or gas cards are to be used. Now that is what I call convenience!

We’re all pretty familiar with earning points for specific stores when we shop at their locations. With most gasoline credit cards, you can earn points wherever you use your card. Earn points and treat yourself to a prize reward, or better yet, redeem them for cash off your gas bill!

What if you have a bad credit history? Gasoline credit cards are a better option than bank credit cards for this purpose because gasoline credit cards have a higher approval rate. Applying for a gas credit card is definitely a good choice for anyone who might have a bad credit history and wants to save on gas.

Once you have decided that you want a gas credit card, applying is easy! Compare credit cards online, then fill out a safe, secure application.

categoriamanage money, save money commentoNo Comments dataSeptember 21st, 2009
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Taking Steps To Repair Bad Credit

By Robertson Erin

Your Life and Credit Repair

Repairing your bad credit is never easy, but there are solutions that can help you get out of debt. Everyone has bills and sometimes bills can get out of control. Because paying your bills is an ongoing process, the best possible solution when you are in trouble is by asking for help and working to get your debt under control.

Since new laws make it difficult for consumers to restore their credit rating, it might seem impossible to get out of trouble. However, under the law it is possible to get all three of your credit reports free of charge.

If you have a poor credit history, you should request copies of your credit reports to be certain that there are no mistakes or false charges. If you do find erroneous claims on your credit report the first thing you should do is file a dispute against the claims. This will likely delay your payments and if you are found not to be responsible for the debt it can free you from it all together.

Contact the agencies as soon as possible if you notice any invalid accounts or incorrect claims that are not your responsibility. For your convenience, Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax all have dispute hot lines available.

Disputing can be one step toward repairing your credit. Most of the information listed on credit reports is from banks, credit card companies, utilities providers, legal judgments, etc. Typically, that information remains on your credit report for at least 7 years. Positive ratings often remain on your report for 10 years. Tax liens will remain on your credit report for 15 years and bankruptcies will remain on your credit report for 10 years. That is why it is important to dispute any credit claims that are on your report that are not yours.

The bureaus will investigate, and if they find in your favor, the debts will be erased from your credit report. For this reason, it is very important to keep track of your credit report, and view it on a regular basis. You also have the ability to view your credit score from the reports so that you can see how it has been affected by your report.

If you find claims against you that you are responsible for, but don’t know how to fix, you should educate yourself.

Do not believe it when credit repair companies assert that they can remove items from your credit report and lower your monthly payments. The government watches most of these agencies and the government has been given reason to believe that some of these agencies have misled customers.

Most of these companies are only looking to cheat you, all the while putting you at risk of further damaging your credit. If you need help or support with your credit then it is easy and sensible to consult counselors at the National Foundation for Credit Counseling. The representatives are highly trained in helping consumers find a legal way to improve their credit, and get out of debt, while keeping the creditors at bay.

Make sure that you know your rights if you are looking for ways to repair your bad credit. It is still possible to overcome bad credit, and build good credit again.

You are not alone, and there are places that you can turn. The Consumer Response Center is another great resource for learning about your rights. There are some cases where you have more rights than you might realize. Victims of Identity Theft or Military Personnel that have had their identities stolen often have more rights than people who simply fail to pay their bills.

Knowing your rights and where to turn for help is the first step in repairing your bad credit.

categoriamanage money commentoNo Comments dataSeptember 20th, 2009
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