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Get the inside scoop onhome bank loans with bad credit
Bad Credit Doesn't Rule Out Unsecured Credit Cards Many people believe that because of their bad credit, unsecured credit cards are not available to them. While it may be more difficult, there are options for people with bad credit who want an unsecured credit card to build their credit or have available for use in an emergency. While a secured credit card is the most commonly recommended option for people with bad credit, unsecured credit cards ARE available - even for those with the worst credit.
Bad Credit: Unsecured Credit Cards vs. Secured Credit Cards
One of the easiest ways to get a credit card when you have bad credit is to opt for a secured credit card. With a secured credit card, you deposit money in a bank designated by the credit card company to serve as a 'security deposit' - an assurance that they'll get their money if you default on payments. Depending on the lender, that deposit might be equal to your desired credit limit, or slightly higher or lower. A security deposit of $300, for instance, might get you a $150 line of credit with one company, a $300 line of credit with another, and a $400 one with yet a third. The interest rate is generally competitive, since the company has a guarantee of getting its money if you don't make payments.
An unsecured credit card requires no security deposit. A bad credit unsecured credit card will often have either a high APR (annual percentage rate), high fees, or both. How do the two stack up against each other? Here's a comparison from two actual credit card offers that are sitting on my desk as I write:
Secured Credit Card Security Deposit: $250 Annual Fee: $35 Setup Fee: $35 APR: 15.40%
Credit Limit Increases: $100 increments, each require $100 deposit
Bottom Line: It will cost you $370 to maintain a $250 credit limit for the first year, with at least $250 up front, at an APR of 15.40%. You'll have $170 available credit upon receipt of your card. You'll have to put up an additional $100 every time you want to increase your credit limit.
Bad Credit Unsecured Credit Card Annual Fee: $48 Setup Fee: $29 Participation Fee: $72 (annual, billed at $6 monthly) Program Fee: $95 (one time fee) APR: 9.9%
Credit Limit Increases: $25 (per increase of $100, at their discretion)
Bottom line: It will cost you $244 for the first year, all of it billed to your credit card on your first statement, to maintain a $250 credit limit with an APR of 9.9%. You'll have $72 credit available upon receipt of your card.
In the long run, while a bad credit unsecured credit card may cost you more, you won't be tying up your money up front. Either card will help repair your credit as you make payments on time and regularly, but the unsecured card has an APR that's almost 5% lower. You're the only one who can decide which is the better option for you - but it makes sense to weigh all your options before you decide that your only way to have a credit card is with a security deposit.
@ Copyright 2005 - Bill A Smith
About the Author Bill A Smith is a credit counselor for http://www.americreditservices.com/ Feel free to visit our bad credit help center at http://www.americreditservices.com/bad-credit/
More Useful Resource and Updates on home bank loans with bad credit
- Door to a mortgage can be harder to open (Houston Chronicle)
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- Experts: Credit there, confidence not (The Hazleton Standard-Speaker)
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- Credit damage may be price of moving on (Bankrate.com via Yahoo! Finance)
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- Financial Crisis Lays Fertile Ground for Lawsuit Boom (New York Times)
Nothing makes lawyers more popular than bad times, according to The New York Times?s Jonathan D. Glater.
- Loan Outlook Fair Despite Bad Economy (FOX 9 News Twin Cities)
With many financial institutions tightening their credit standards, some customers are left wondering if banks have any money left to lend.
- Predators target minorities, elderly (Chicago Sun-Times)
Dorothy Davis was sitting at her kitchen table in her Kankakee home when she felt water dripping. It was the roof. Davis, 76 and widowed, didn't think she could afford a new one. So when a mortgage broker visited and said he could get a low-cost loan to cover home repairs, she signed on.
- Bad times, sure, but no Depression (San Francisco Chronicle)
Americans binge on credit in a mania of speculation and consumption until the debt-fueled bubble bursts. Wall Street has a meltdown, the mania turns to hysteria, and the economy goes haywire. That scenario spawned the Great Depression - and it's painfully...
- ANNIE'S MAILBOX: Taking daughter to court is one option to recoup loan (Lancaster Online)
Dear Annie: Five years ago, I had a mortgage of $15,000 left on my home. My daughter, "Jacey," wanted to buy a house, but her husband's credit was bad and she couldn't get a bank loan, so she asked me to take out a second mortgage and give her the money.Jacey was to pay $400 a month, and I'd pay the...
- Predators target minorities (Chicago Sun-Times)
Dorothy Davis was sitting at her kitchen table in her Kankakee home when she felt water dripping. It was the roof. When a mortgage broker visited and said he could get a low-cost loan to cover home repairs, she signed on. And she was scammed. Davis is just one face of a portion of the mortgage crisis whose bad loans at one time helped feed the appetite of Wall Street investors.
- If hard times loom and you have a home equity loan, consider tapping it out now. Withdraw all you think you ll need ... (San Jose Mercury News)
But in the new credit-starved economy, old axioms don't always hold sway. Of course not everyone agrees to an equity-grabbing approach, but there is a consensus among financial experts that your lender could take back your equity loan money if you don't get to it first.
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