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Posts Tagged ‘CREDIT CARDS’

Authorized Users—What Are They? How Can They Build Your Score Fast?

One of the first pieces of advice I give to people who have suffered severe financial crises and want to learn how to build credit is to become authorized users on credit cards. Authorized users are allowed to use credit cards but have no contractual obligation to pay the bills.

For this reason, a person does not need to have a high credit score to qualify for authorized user status on a credit card. However, the credit card’s history will often be reported on the authorized user’s credit report, so long as the authorized user is related to the account holder.

Becoming an authorized user on a family member’s credit card will quickly raise your credit score (even after bankruptcy or other financial disaster) by allowing you to “borrow” the account holder’s clean credit history.

However, the account holder—fearful that you will rack up huge charges you cannot or will not repay—might be reluctant to add your name to his or her account. Let the account holder know that she or he can be protected.

  1. First, the account holder should shred the credit card that arrives for you.
  2. Second, the account holder should never give you the account number, credit card expiration date, or card security code.

In this way, your credit score will increase while still protecting the account holder from any irresponsible behavior on your part.

Authorized users should also protect themselves by choosing the account wisely. Only authorized users who are related to the account holders will see their bad credit scores benefit from this strategy. Therefore, be sure you choose an account holder who is also a relative. Try to choose someone with the same last name and address. Otherwise, the credit-scoring bureaus might not recognize your status as an authorized user, and your credit score might not improve.

To make sure that the credit card company is reporting your status as an authorized user, call them and ask. You can also check your credit report to see if the account is appearing. If not, choose another account holder.

Be sure that you also choose a responsible relative with an account in good standing. If you become an authorized user on an account that becomes delinquent, guess what happens? Your score will drop. As such, be sure to pick an account with a clean history of payments. Be sure, too, that the balance on the card stays low—preferably about 30 percent of the limit. If the balance exceeds 30 percent, or if the account holder makes a late payment, you should immediately remove your name as an authorized user so the negative information does not hurt your credit score.

Authorized users usually see a quick jump in their score. After twelve or eighteen months, you might be able to remove yourself from the account and qualify for loans on your own.

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Teaching Children About Credit Cards

With the past 18 months reminding us to be thrifty, many parents are realizing the importance of teaching children about credit cards. In particular, we need to teach children how to build credit by using credit cards wisely and, perhaps more importantly, how to protect their finances from misuse of credit cards.

Though the Credit Card Act of 2009 intended to protect consumers from the credit card industry, the truth is that we should be equally concerned about protecting consumers from themselves! Without proper education, our children risk repeating our mistakes. Indeed, “just charge it” seemed a mantra in the 1990s and early 2000s. Middle-class families ended up paying tens of thousands in interest rate debt.

Leveraging the lessons we learned from the recession, we should all begin teaching children about credit cards so that future generations make wiser choices when it comes to charging debt.

Teaching children about credit cards starts at home by allowing your children to make small, approved purchases with your existing credit cards. I know this sounds crazy, so let me clarify: I do not think you should give your child unlimited access to a credit card with a $20,000 limit. That would be a recipe for disaster.

But how about handing your seven-year-old daughter your credit card when she wants to purchase an $11 toy? Allow her to participate in the process by handing the credit cards to the cashier. Tell her to hold onto a copy of the receipt showing you how much money she owes you. Then have her repay the debt by handing you cash she earns from household chores or an allowance.

And how about older children? Teaching children about credit cards can continue when your children enter their teen years. Hold monthly finance and credit meetings where you review credit card statements, discuss interest rates, and explain how the credit scoring systems works. Consider your own “credit card score,” a term I coined to describe how helpful a person’s use of credit cards is in building his or her credit score.

If your finances (and your utilization rate) can handle it, allow your teenager to make a larger purchase. Then charge interest. If your child fails to make a payment on time, charge a late fee.

Do not, however, get angry or ground your child. When teaching children about credit cards, try to establish a scenario that would happen in real life. The credit card companies would never ground a customer for failing to pay a bill on time. They would, however, call their customers at 8 a.m. to remind them that the bill is due. Feel free to call your teenager’s cell phone at the crack of dawn to remind her that her payment is past due.

In fact, you should embrace a mistake that your child makes while at home. Learning lessons early, when the repercussions are minor, is far better than learning them when the stakes are high.

For more information on teaching children about credit cards, be sure to register for our free teleseminar that teaches you how to improve your credit score.

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