Originally posted by maat55
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Psychology and CC reward programs
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Originally posted by maat55 View Post
I wonder if other cards let you pay your mortgage.
I haven't found one that did. Although, I should qualify this by saying that almost all the CCs will let you pay anything you want to using one of those convenience checks they include with the bill. There are several problems with this (with the CCs that I am familiar with, anyway). They are considered a cash advance, so you pay a transaction fee and interest starts accruing immediately. And finally, they don't give you reward points for cash advances.
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I don't charge much at all, but my husband shops at Home Depot almost every day. Our bill runs $2,000 to $5,000 a month. The nice thing is, we use the customer's money to pay that monthly bill cause the supplies are for the customer.
Chase rewards only gives back 1%, but on home improvement items, we get 3% and that is about all he buys.
I pretty much get a check or two a month which I add to my challenge money.
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Talk about psychology - we have the Disney Rewards Card from Chase. You only get 1%. As far as I can tell, that pretty much sucks.
So why do we do it? Because we like Disney.
We should probably switch to something more lucrative with the c/c.
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Originally posted by maat55 View PostI can, between my personal and business expenses, get to around 3,000 per month. I was told on another forum that I could move my 10k EF over to a Countrywide high yield account at 3.55% and open a visa through them that pays 2% on all purchases. I should be able to pay my mortgage on this card I hope. The earnings are deposited into my HY savings account.
Do you think this is a good deal?
If you can acquire a card that pays 2% on everything, please post it for the rest of us. The high yield Countrywide account was a no-brainer for me. I've been quite happy with it. My ING account was less happy when I moved it all to Countrywide though.
EDIT: Link to the card offerLast edited by Slug; 07-28-2008, 05:10 PM.
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Originally posted by safariFor the same reason you can't buy a car and pay entirely with a credit card - the dealer will only let you charge up to $5,000 and the rest has to be cash.
if the car company is willing to accept any portion of the car to be paid for by a credit card then they must be willing to accept the whole amount being purchased. just show up with merchant argeement and a willingness to tell visa or mastercard and the dealership will back down. but they might not lower the price in negotiation as much because of the transaction fee.
visa (see page 9)
mastercard (see page 2-60)
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Originally posted by simpletron View Postthey might not lower the price in negotiation as much because of the transaction fee.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostDon't tell them how you intend to pay until after you've got the price in writing. When I buy a car, I don't tell them if I'm fianancing through them, outside financing or paying cash. I don't reveal that info until I know the price of the car.
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