You are you viewing the Bankruptcy Forum as a guest (limited viewing).
Don't have a BKForum account yet?
Please REGISTER (it's FREE & takes 30 seconds) so you can post your own questions and see all the features available to registered users.
Just for the heck of it, I applied for a capital one card online.
At the time, I was only 20 days post my 341 meeting. I'm not discharged yet.
But they still approved me for a $1000 platinum card.
No fees (as far as I know of).
Interesting.
Did you include them in your bankruptcy?
I did, so am wondering if they will trust me again... (though of course they should since I cannot file again). But who knows?
To avoid NSF check charges, if your bank/credit union will allow it, tie your savings account to your checking account. Then if you do not have sufficient funds, it draws from your savings. This will solve the problem of the bank/credit union running the checks before the deposits.
The truth is that most of us in this forum have not done very well managing our $$$ and cents. So, why are we paying these high fees to get credit that got us here in the first place?
Not entirely true.
Many of us were hit with major medical bills, divorce, or identity theft or job loss. It really had nothing to do with money management.
The truth is that most of us in this forum have not done very well managing our $$$ and cents. So, why are we paying these high fees to get credit that got us here in the first place?
A good credit score can help employment and the cost of insurance, so we need a good score.
The lowest cost secured card I have found is from First National Bank of Ohama. The fee is $20/year, and the opening deposit is $500, and they report to all three CRAs.
So, why do others get ripped off with Orchard and the likes them, I ask.
regards,
emoney
Thanks for the info! So, Orchard will be my first application!
Question: (sorry if this has been answered somewhere, I just don't have time at the moment to search for it and hope someone who knows can just save me the time):
When is it best to apply for new credit? Is it okay right after the discharge? Or should one wait a while? Or ??? Also, will someone like Capitol One consider giving you more credit even though you filed againt them for a grand or two?
The truth is that most of us in this forum have not done very well managing our $$$ and cents. So, why are we paying these high fees to get credit that got us here in the first place?
A good credit score can help employment and the cost of insurance, so we need a good score.
The lowest cost secured card I have found is from First National Bank of Ohama. The fee is $20/year, and the opening deposit is $500, and they report to all three CRAs.
So, why do others get ripped off with Orchard and the likes them, I ask.
regards,
emoney
I was told by a BK lawyer that they can do that as long as it is disclosed in the terms & conditions. So if you apply for one and get approved for it, and it's someone you BK'd on before, make sure you read through those terms & conditions to make sure they don't slide that in on you.
Umm, this kind of got posted and no one commented on it.
I'd like to hear from an expert here, maybe a moderator:
Can this be true??
How could they add debt back in that has been discharged in bankruptcy, through fine print on a credit card??
Is this legal in some states? All states? Any states???
Orchard is very good they report to all 3 of the agencies. I had one, $1000 in collateral, so no annual fee. Since September 2006, always paid on time, told my attny that I wanted to reaffirm this, small balance on it. Doing my filing she makes a mistake send them a letter. SO guess what, I sent her a nasty email, yelled at customer service I want the phone# of the person who handles the situation of new filers, I want a replacement card with my collateral on it. My attourney is also calling, she has "fixed" my file, but I am not letting her off the hook. I would recommend Orchard. I did get a mailing that it is a $100 annual fee. I don't honestly remember last September if I had to pay the $100 with the collateral.
I noticed that you had a JFCU card and I looked into applying for that card; however, when I tried to apply it came up as a "loan application". Is this really a credit card or some sort of loan?
Yes, its a visa credit card, and a credit card is an unsecured loan. You have to complete the loan application to be considered for a credit card.
I noticed that you had a JFCU card and I looked into applying for that card; however, when I tried to apply it came up as a "loan application". Is this really a credit card or some sort of loan?
Probably not. Worst case is if they decline you immediately due to that fact, chances are they wouldn't go and waste any more inquiries on your credit reports.
Back in the day after my Chapter 7 was discharged (in the early 90's) I had obtained a Capital One Visa Card where if I sent them money THAT was my limit (No Fees - My Credit - and no, they did not treat it like a Debit card and everything was reported to all 3 bureaus like a credit card), eventually overtime they would reimburse me the monies I put into it and establish a line of credit with them. Through the years that have come and gone I was establishing credit left and right with big name banks and credit unions and no fees. I'm sure No Fee Credit Card offers are still out there? Maybe even Capital One? Those were the days!
Ok, I will take your advice on that. And believe me I'm going back and forth with transunion & experian to make sure they report my bankruptcy correct. still have some accounts not showing in bankruptcy status. This week I have to send transunion a list of all my creditors that were included just to make sure they have everything right.!
Leave a comment: