hypothetical credit card financing question

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Hi guys,

I had a thought on the way to work this morning. Would it be a terrible idea to get one (or more) 12 months interest free credit credit cards to make a purchase of a roughly 2-3k car and pay it off in a year?

B@
 
if you actively manage the account so that you dont pay any additional fees and dont go over the 0% interest period then I dont see the issue personally.
 
Hi, isn't 0% only on balance transfer deals, and, I heard from my bank, if you keep opening, or even applying, for credit cards it could affect your credit rating as well.
 
Hi, isn't 0% only on balance transfer deals, and, I heard from my bank, if you keep opening, or even applying, for credit cards it could affect your credit rating as well.

depends on the card, a lot offer interest free on first purchases for a month or whatever

I think the bit about affecting your credit rating is wrong, I balance transfer my cards all the time and my rating is golden. I think if you continually apply for cards and get declined that could earn you bad marks but apart from that I can't (and don't) see an issue :)
 
Hi, isn't 0% only on balance transfer deals, and, I heard from my bank, if you keep opening, or even applying, for credit cards it could affect your credit rating as well.

Many credit cards with these 0% promotions offer the choice of 0% balance transfer or 0% purchases but not both. Obviously if you plan on making purchases then you would choose a card for 0% purchases.

depends on the card, a lot offer interest free on first purchases for a month or whatever

I think the bit about affecting your credit rating is wrong, I balance transfer my cards all the time and my rating is golden. I think if you continually apply for cards and get declined that could earn you bad marks but apart from that I can't (and don't) see an issue :)

Yep you are right, its only if you get declined and keep applying that it could have a negative effect on your credit rating. The more declines you have in a short period of time will make other lenders more cautious, thus more likely to decline
 
The problem with this is:

a) Dealers will surcharge you
b) It means buying from a dealer, which for a sub £3-4k car means paying over the odds for something no better, if not worse, than the same thing from a private seller.
 
An alternative is to find a credit card with 0% balance transfer to your bank account, though you will have to pay a handling fee of usually 2.9%, if you want funds to do privately (and avoid dealer mark up / CC fee which I am sure will be a lot more than 2.9%)
 
Although it wouldn't be completely without charge - could you take the cash advance into your bank account from the card (You used to be able to have cards that wouldn't charge you the cash rate)

Then do a balance transfer - assuming the 1st card cash advance wouldn't have a 0% period?

Can you pay of unsecured loans with a credit card? Take out the loan for £3K then pay it off with the credit card. If the card provider saw it as a "purchase" you might get in on 0%.

I went for 0% for 6 months on our kitchen - thinking it would be good for me to get it shot ASAP we now have a lovely kitchen but living on bread and butter until August :D
 
[TW]Fox;18805388 said:
The problem with this is:

a) Dealers will surcharge you
b) It means buying from a dealer, which for a sub £3-4k car means paying over the odds for something no better, if not worse, than the same thing from a private seller.

ye, i think you'd have to wrangle it so you get the money but buy privately. Something like Eddscott has suggested

B@
 
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shove 3k on your overdraft, get the cash, buy the car, transfer the balance to an mbna platinum thingy, pay it off before they raise the interest rate to 44% after the first year.

job done
 
This is an MBNA card but I can't see the details about the bank transfer. Can you clarify??

I did one about 3 months ago, got a £5k limit.

From the FAQs on the website:
Q. How do I transfer a balance?
A. The easiest and quickest way to do a balance transfer is to complete the request as part of the application process. You can also transfer a balance once you have registered with our online banking facility 24 hours a day or alternatively you can call us.
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Q. What is a money Transfer?
A. You can transfer money from your credit card straight into your current account. This money could then be used for large purchases such as a new car or home improvements where payment with a credit card may not be possible.
 
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