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-   -   Credit card cheques for monthly insurance payment, will it work? (https://www.revscene.net/forums/656957-credit-card-cheques-monthly-insurance-payment-will-work.html)

RRxtar 11-05-2011 11:45 PM

if you dont have $2200 in the bank to pay off the full year, don't put it on your CC at ~19%. ICBC's autoplan12 payment plan is like 4%

FerrariEnzo 11-06-2011 07:17 AM

dont get me wrong, i dont owe $2000+ on my credit card.. in fact, i have a credit on my credit card... usually by the time i get my statement, i have either zero owing or a few hundred owing... then i again, i put about $80 of my paycheck to my card and the rest into my savings.. so i usually have $3000 or so credit on my credit card every month.. probably defeats the purpose of having a card.. but i would hate to receive a bill for $2000-$3000... plus it builds up credit faster... err I hope..

taylor192 11-06-2011 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cressydrift (Post 7678181)
Credit cards to track your spending? Ever heard of bank statements, and online banking? I know I am coming across as a dick but you should chop up them cards.

I know we're getting off topic, yet you're also coming across as dumb.

My credit card company offers online statements with a built in budgeting feature. It txts and/or emails me when I hit certain limits I set. This is fantastic as my money can sit in my account all month earning interest, while my spending for the month is interest free on my CC - plus I earn rewards while spending everything on my CC.

Yet this approach only works for those who can control their spending and pay their CC in full every month.

cressydrift 11-06-2011 09:40 AM

^Congratulations, you are able to use a credit card and take advantage of its powers.

Some people can, and others use it as there primary means of spending and live pay cheque to pay cheque. The original question was if he can pay for his insurance with credit card cheques. Clearly he is un able to handle the power of a credit card.
Then he told me its his way of keeping tabs of his money spending, and reminded him that you are able to use online banking and bank statements to track your money.

And for calling me dumb? Name calling is for children.

taylor192 11-06-2011 12:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cressydrift (Post 7678615)
And for calling me dumb? Name calling is for children.

You wanted to act like a dick and tell the OP its wrong to budget with a CC be prepared to be called dumb when others point out that budgeting with a CC is what smart people do.

cressydrift 11-06-2011 07:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by taylor192 (Post 7678758)
You wanted to act like a dick and tell the OP its wrong to budget with a CC be prepared to be called dumb when others point out that budgeting with a CC is what smart people do.


Oh so thats what smart people do, budget with credit cards. Guess I have been doing it all wrong over the years. Guess I should throw out my traditional budget that has worked so well and is tried tested and true for this credit card budget. That only works, as you said

"Yet this approach only works for those who can control their spending and pay their CC in full every month." - taylor192

Gotcha. Its so easy to control your spending in todays world its funny.

Oh and P.S, when my credit card budget doesn't work out, daddy doesn't help me.

taylor192 11-06-2011 08:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cressydrift (Post 7679406)
Oh so thats what smart people do, budget with credit cards. Guess I have been doing it all wrong over the years. Guess I should throw out my traditional budget that has worked so well and is tried tested and true for this credit card budget. That only works, as you said

Further proof you deserve to be called dumb. I never said other methods to budget don't work, I said:

Quote:

This is fantastic as my money can sit in my account all month earning interest, while my spending for the month is interest free on my CC - plus I earn rewards while spending everything on my CC.
Quote:

Originally Posted by cressydrift (Post 7679406)
Gotcha. Its so easy to control your spending in todays world its funny.

It is, if you're not dumb.

Quote:

Originally Posted by cressydrift (Post 7679406)
Oh and P.S, when my credit card budget doesn't work out, daddy doesn't help me.

Who cares? Did I ask this? Nope.

shenmecar 11-06-2011 08:49 PM

Im just gonna put this here:

http://images.mylot.com/userImages/i...os/1719835.jpg

As for OP, go to your insurance broker and buy insurance for 1 year but ask them to set up automatic monthly bank withdraws for the coming year. You will need to bring a bank account cheque with the word "VOID" written across it. Dont cover up the numbers at the bottom though. This way, (i think) you can avoid aircare until next year, and you wouldn't have to pay up front $2200 at one go. You will however pay slightly more as a premium for spreading out your payments, but if your financial situation is really as bad as you say it is, this is likely the best solution.

PS: Aircare is not that expensive anyways.

gretzky 11-06-2011 11:34 PM

Quote:

You will however pay slightly more as a premium for spreading out your payments
so if you pay monthly with a void check out of your bank account then you would be charged more?? i thought it would be the same as paying off in full with cash or whatever.. if this is true i rather just pay for 6 months in full and save... pretty damn sure when you pay monthly threw void check/autowithdrawels its the same price???? someone tell me this..

it sounds like you guys think i am a debter and im in big debt... i dont think i ever said that but i am not.. i just got alot of shit to pay for and it all adds up, it seems easier to track what you have spent on a credit card cause yeah like taylor said you can check online is which i do, of course.. just like a bank account.. and of course i never pay interest because i am never due on payments, i dont want bad credit.. i am pretty sure alot of people do the same.. some people like cash some people like credit cards..i think credit cards are good when you get rewards and want good credit, i just got MBNA credit card which has pretty sweet deals, 5% on gas and groceries for first 6 months and then after that is 3% or some crap like that.. if you are gonna spend the money might as well get cash back.. i would guess the people that dont have/use credit cards are the broker people haha.. no steady income and you can fuck up your credit if you spent money on it and cant pay back..

jlenko 11-07-2011 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gretzky
i thought it would be the same as paying off in full with cash or whatever.. if this is true i rather just pay for 6 months in full and save... pretty damn sure when you pay monthly threw void check/autowithdrawels its the same price???? someone tell me this..

Yeah, it costs more to finance it. Pretty basic principle there.

ICBC | Autoplan payment plans

Costs you $15 extra to do a financing plan, plus prime interest rate minus 1%.

Doing less than a full year costs you more as well. The cheapest insurance is... a full year, paid in full. Or ride the bus, that's way cheaper.

skippynixx 11-07-2011 03:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by taylor192 (Post 7678758)
You wanted to act like a dick and tell the OP its wrong to budget with a CC be prepared to be called dumb when others point out that budgeting with a CC is what smart people do.

dumbest post ever.


you need a CC company to tell you when you've spent too much?

do you also wear a helmet out in public?

freakshow 11-07-2011 03:26 PM

Here's the bottom line: If you can pay off your credit card in full every month, it's simply a superior way to spend money. You gain interest while your money is in the account, and you get rewards like cash back for using your CC.

Unless I'm forced to use another payment method, I ALWAYS use my CC.

There's mainly two reasons you wouldn't do this:
a) You can't control yourself with the CC, and you spend more than you have or more than your normally would.
or b) You just like having cash, like paying with cash, or are just used to paying with cash. I like gaining more interest and more rewards on my CC, so to each his own.

Gridlock 11-08-2011 08:01 AM

So off-topic, but I get mad at my bank about credit cards. Every and any problem I have with my bank account, they try to solve with a credit card.

My favorite: I got a message that there was a security breach, and I should change the pins to my bank card. Ok. So I go into the branch and ask what the deal is. He doesn't really know, and plays around on the computer and says I'm fine.

So my next stop is some shopping, and low and behold...my bank card doesn't work. Oh yeah, neither does the business account. Of course there's a line behind me, and of course I look like a broke douche. Thankfully our joint account is with a different bank, and I can continue on my way.

My way features me going back to the bank. I go up to the same dude.

"Hi! Remember me? I'm going to need to see your manager."

Explain the situation, and she says she's sorry, here's some free fucking air miles and then says, "well, its situations like this that you need a credit card"

Hey...I'm all over turning a situation into a sales call, but really? I need a credit card in case dumb fuck here 1 hour out of training fucks up every account I have held with this wonderful bank starting when I was 12?

I have had a couple of run ins with her(the manager). My business account was brutal as its held at the Denman location and I work out of the New West branch. Anytime now that they give me shit, its the same routine: Call up the info screen. Read it. Questions?

No sir.

I had the Denman branch load up the system with the answer to any question they could possible have.

"There's a 5 day hold on check deposits"

Really? What does the info screen have to say on that?

"No sir"

Win!


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