Huh. I have a ridiculous credit limit on my VISA - like, $16,000, I never use it but feel gratified that if I ever need to do a bunk to Brazil or someplace I'll have some leeway - I wonder if a car dealer would take it for a car?
'Out Of Gas'
Natter 69: Practically names itself.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The first dealership I checked with said no, so I pretty much assumed the others wouldn't. I do not know that explicitly for this one, though. It just didn't seem to be in their interest. So to speak.
For my business, I lose .035% on every credit card charge. That's a lot of money on $16,000.
Can you -- and by "you" I mean people in general -- not? Do you have to finance? (I've never had a credit card with more than a $1000 limit.)
I've always paid cash for cars, or my folks financed it, because my credit is shite (THANKS, college "sign-up-dumb-young-moron-and-we'll-give-you-a-candy-bar-and-a-credit-card") and I paid my parents each month, and I've never paid more than $2500 for a car.
Would you then get a loan to pay off the credit card immediately? My first reaction was gasping at the thought of a 13.9% car loan (something my best friend proposed doing back in college when cc rates were more like 19%).
Huh. I have a ridiculous credit limit on my VISA - like, $16,000, I never use it but feel gratified that if I ever need to do a bunk to Brazil or someplace I'll have some leeway - I wonder if a car dealer would take it for a car?
My dealership let me put like $5 grand of downpayment on my Amex, which I then just paid off. The rest I made up with a check.
Yeah, my experience has been that the dealer would let us put a certain amount on the card, but not the whole thing.
Would you then get a loan to pay off the credit card immediately?
Since I only want financing on a small amount (and I can't get a car loan for less than 7500), I could pay off most of it right away.
And, to be honest, in the period before it came due, I'd probably waffle and put the money together anyway, but that's not as soon as tomorrow. But that's just my position.
But if could downpay with a credit card--well, that's just fine too. Hmm.
It wouldn't make sense to finance a car that way unless you had a super-magic credit card; I was thinking more to manage cash flow temporarily, like until you could get funds out of a CD or a mutual fund or something.
I do like thinking about charging my 4 one-way tickets to a sunny country with tax shelters and no extradition treaty, though.
When I declared bankruptcy 12 years ago, I got the lawyer's fee by doing a cash advance on the credit card that was about to be wiped out. I feel a little bad about it now, but it made me giggle then.
Of course, that lawyer didn't bother to show up at the court hearing and we had to get a volunteer from the lawyers sitting around waiting for their cases, so maybe it all worked out.