Learning Outcomes
- Describe the opportunities, risks, and rewards of owning a credit card
Getting and Using a Credit Card
One of the most controversial aspects of personal finance is the use of credit cards. While credit cards can be an incredibly useful tool, their high interest rates, combined with the how easily credit cards can bury you in debt, make them extremely dangerous if not managed correctly.
For many college students, who may not have a lot of money or even a job at all, owning a credit card may seem out of reach. Without money in an account and assurance that you can pay your monthly credit bill, the average student may not seem very credit-worthy. Still, it can be important to build a credit history for certain opportunities down the road (such as getting a loan to buy a house). You may be surprised to learn that there are plenty of companies that offer special options for younger customers, especially students. The following are some offers to look for:
- Error forgiveness: Since you may be new to the responsibility of owning a credit card, it’s good to look for plans with error forgiveness. This may include a zero-percent annual percentage rate (APR) for the first six months of a contract or waive user penalties if you miss or have a late monthly payment for the first time.
- No extra fees: Along with zero-percent APRs for the first six months, some credit cards don’t charge students for using their cards in other countries. This feature is nice for students interested in studying or traveling abroad.
- A report to all three credit bureaus: Student credit cards should report to all three major credit bureaus. It’s important for TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian to have records of your credit history because they use that information to calculate your credit score. Your credit score will be used to evaluated your credit worthiness for loans and more.[1]
How to Use a Credit Card
All the benefits of credit cards are destroyed if you carry credit card debt. Credit cards should be used as a method of paying for things you can afford, meaning you should only use a credit card if the money is already sitting in your bank account and is budgeted for the item you are buying. If you use credit cards as a loan, you are losing the game.
Every month, you should pay your credit card off in full, meaning you will be bringing the loan amount down to zero dollars. If your statement says you charged $432.56 that month, make sure you can pay off all $432.56. If you pay off your bill in full every month, you won’t ever pay any interest on the credit card.
But what happens if you don’t pay your bill off in full? If you are even one cent short on the payment, meaning you pay $432.55 instead, you must pay daily interest on the entire amount from the date you made the purchases. Your credit card company, of course, will be perfectly happy for you to make smaller payments—that’s how they make money. It is not uncommon for people to pay twice as much as the amount purchased and take years to pay off a credit card when they only pay the minimum payment each month.
What to Look for in Your Initial Credit Card
-
Find a Low-Rate Credit Card: Even though you plan to never pay interest, mistakes will happen, and you don’t want to be paying high interest while you fix a misstep. Start by narrowing the hundreds of card options to the few with the lowest APR (annual percentage rate). However, be mindful of introductory offers of low APR, as those are likely to change to much higher APR rates after the introductory period is over.
-
Avoid Cards with Annual Fees or Minimum Usage Requirements: Your first credit card should ideally be one you can keep forever, but that’s expensive to do if they charge you an annual fee or have other requirements just for having the card. There are many options that won’t require you to spend a minimum amount each month and won’t charge you an annual fee.
-
Keep the Credit Limit Equal to Two Weeks’ Take-Home Pay: Even though you want to pay your credit card off in full, most people will max out their credit cards once or twice while they are building their good financial habits. If this happens to you, having a small credit limit makes that mistake a small mistake instead of a $5,000 mistake.
-
Avoid Rewards Cards: Rewards systems with credit cards are designed by experts to get you to spend more money and pay more interest than you otherwise would. Until you build a strong habit of paying off your card in full each month, don’t step into their trap.
Try It
Risks and Rewards of Credit
Credit cards can give students new opportunities, but owning them is also a big responsibility. Students should consider the advantages and disadvantages of credit before choosing the best plan.
Credit Pros
- Secure and convenient method of making purchases: When you carry cash, you have the potential of having the money lost or stolen. A credit card or debit card, on the other hand, can be canceled and replaced at no cost to you.
- Greater consumer protections than debit cards: These consumer protections are written into law, and with credit cards you have a maximum liability of $50. With a debit card, you are responsible for transfers made up until the point you report the card stolen. In order to have the same protections as with credit cards, you need to report the card lost or stolen within forty-eight hours. The longer you wait to report the loss of the card, or the longer it takes you to realize you lost your card, the more money you may be responsible for, up to an unlimited amount.[2]
- Building credit: If you pay off your monthly credit card every month on time, you will start building credit and have a good credit score early on. Your credit score can be an important factor later on if you decide to open another account or take out a loan. Some employers may even want to see your credit history. While most people associate a credit score with getting better rates on loans, credit scores are also important to getting a job, lowering car insurance rates, and finding an apartment.[3]
Credit Cons
- Overspending: If something is out of sight, it may be out of mind and the same can be true of money. Sometimes people overspend with credit cards because it’s easy to think that you have more money than you really do.
- Interest: Credit card companies with student deals still typically include some level of APR or interest rate. If you don’t pay off the entire balance every month, using a credit card can be expensive. Suppose you decide to use your credit card to pay for $1,000 in school supplies and books. Credit Card 1 has an APR of ten percent, and Credit Card 2 has an APR of twenty-four percent. If it takes you a year to pay off the $1,000, you’d actually pay a total of $1,055.04 with Credit Card 1 and $1,134.72 with Credit Card 2—that’s $55 for the first card or $135 for the second card on top of the original $1,000 you charged. This example highlights the importance of making sure you pay off the balance as soon as possible AND choosing a credit card with a lower interest rate.
- Debt: Unlike debit cards, credit cards allow users to borrow money that they can pay back at a later date. While this allowance can be useful in emergency situations, you may end up charging more than you can afford to pay back right way, and you may find yourself saddled with debt. Carrying a lot of debt can damage your credit history and credit score.
The Danger of Debt
When you take out a loan, you take on an obligation to pay the money back, with interest, through a monthly payment. You will take this debt with you when you apply for auto loans or home loans, when you enter into a marriage, when you buy a home, and so on. Effectively, you have committed your future income to the loan. While student loans can be a good idea, if you take on too many loans, your future self will be poor no matter how much money you make. To make it worse, you’ll be transferring more and more of your money to the bank through interest payments.
Compounding Interest
While compounding works to make you money when you are earning interest on savings or investments, it works against you when you are paying the interest on loans. To avoid compounding interest on loans, make sure your payments are at least enough to cover the interest charged each month. The good news is that the interest you are charged will be listed each month on the loan account statements you are sent by the bank or credit union, and fully amortized loans will always cover the interest costs plus enough principal to pay off what you owe by the end of the loan term.
The two most common loans on which people get stuck paying compounding interest are credit cards and student loans. Paying the minimum payment each month on a credit card will just barely cover the interest charged that month while anything you buy with the credit card will begin to accrue interest on the day you make the purchase. Since credit cards charge interest daily, you’ll begin paying interest on the interest immediately, starting the compound-interest snowball working against you. When you get a credit card, always pay the credit card balance down to zero dollars each month to avoid the compound interest trap.
Student loans are another way you can be caught in the compound-interest trap. When you have an unsubsidized student loan or put your loans into deferment, the interest continues to rack up on the loans. Again, you’ll be charged interest on the interest, not just on the original loan amount, forcing you to pay compound interest on the loan.
credit card debt explained
Check out this video for more information on how interest can work against you when you’re making minimum payments on your credit card.
Signs You Have Too Much Debt
You can consider yourself in too much debt if you have any of the following situations:
- You cannot make your minimum credit card payments.
- Your money is gone before your next paycheck.
- Bill collectors are contacting you.
- You are unable to get a loan.
- Your paycheck is being garnished by a creditor.
- You are considering a debt consolidation loan with extra fees added.
- Your items are repossessed.
- You do not know your debt or financial situation.
glossary
compound interest: this is effectively interest paid on interest, which can snowball and result in an unmanageable debt load later on
daily interest: what credit card issuers charge each day from the date of making a card purchase
- Cannon, Ellen and Melissa Lambarena. "How to Choose a Student Credit Card." NerdWallet, 28 Oct 2021, http://www.nerdwallet.com/article/credit-cards/choose-student-credit-card. ↵
- “Lost Or Stolen Credit, ATM, and Debit Cards.” Federal Trade Commission: Consumer Information, Aug. 2012, http://www.consumer.ftc.
gov/articles/0213-lost-or- stolen-credit-atm-and-debit- cards. ↵ - Trouesh, Joshua Escalante. “Four Surprising Ways Your Credit Score Will Affect Your Life.” Purposeful Finance, 2016, http://www.purposefulfinance.org/home/Articles/2016/four-surprising-ways-your-credit-score-will-affect-your-life. ↵