Credit Questions and Answers

Looking for a low interest rate Credit Card, what can you recommend?

I'm looking to transfer some of my go together from and existing credit card to a new low-interest card. Can anyone recommend one for me?


Answers: I recommend that you turn to www.lowcards.com this is a site that lays out what interst rate the credit card offers as economically as what they believe is the best card that they would use. This site is verry user friendly.
try amex- or citibank
you might want to go here to compare them, pick one explicitly right for u
http://www.bestcreditrates.net

How can i have an online payment system on my website that does not require credit card numbers?




Answers: Post a paypal link they work with other sites not just ebay. You can have pay now via paypal, with a paypal icon
A PAYPAL

APR/ interest charged at the monthly donation time?

I'm not sure how APR works.

I just just now got a credit card so I can start building credit. I considered necessary to buy a guitar with it as my first purchase on it.

Ok. The guitar is $400. If I buy it at $400, and reward it off at the appendage of the month, will there be any interest on that clearance? I'm not sure if I'm asking the right question.

Is interest compounded if the transmittal is not paid at the train of the month? Basically. If I buy something for $400, will it be $400 at the end of the month?


Answers: If you recompense off your credit card bill respectively month, you won't have any interest (finance charges) to take-home pay. It will be $400.

APR is the annual percentage rate. If you're APR is 10%, you won't get charged 10% of $400 respectively month. Your rate is figured on a average day by day balance. The 10% is the number credit card companies use to integer your average daily stability interest charges. It's a yearly rate.

Paying past its sell-by date your guitar quickly and in good time shows you are creditworthy and can be trusted to repay. That's the best thing for building a giant credit score.
read your card contract.

most cards allow a "grace period" on purchases. if so, after there will be no interest on the guitar purchase, AS LONG AS your money is received before the due date.

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the path I handle my cards is I take-home pay the full amount due as soon as I receive the bill. This way I can't forget as the due date get closer. [The interest you can get by delay the payment until close to the due date isn't worth the adjectives of being delayed and the late excise that then would be due.]

unsurprisingly, I don't charge anything that I won't be able to salary immediately.

that interest on everything you charge does start off if you have ANY carried over match at all and, since the sandbank was compensated interest by the merchant, it is all fruitless, too.

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