| We put everything on credit card. It's great for travel points and it makes expenses easy to track. We pay it off every month. |
+1 I get 3% cash back. It adds up, but I pay off the balance in full every month. |
| We take at least two flights a year on miles earned just from using our credit card -- trips we wouldn't otherwise take. |
Jack Taylor Toyota in Alexandria! |
| We put everything we can on a credit card and have it auto pay in full every month. We’re lucky we have enough of a buffer to do that without thinking. If you live closer to pay check to paycheck, it seems like a bad idea. |
What card gives 3% cash back? |
Absolutely if you have a good credit card that gives rewards. Our Chase Reserve card gives us the wherewithall to purchase plane tickets for various locations for a family of four. We put every expense of CC so we have north of 200,000 "points" available usually when we want to to use them due to multipliers, etc. Also Chase has a travel desk so you can sometimes get good travel deals if you go through them. |
I don't understand why this would be an issue - how would you not pay it off every month if you were already making those purchases in cash or debit? We put everything on credit cards and I even make multiple payments throughout the month. Just treat it like a debit card, I truly don't understand how people who were otherwise decently managing their finances just lose all ability to spend within their limits when it's a credit card. |
| Cash back, easier to dispute/complain about purchases, easy downloading of purchase data into Quicken (minus occasional hiccups). |
You seriously are unaware of the millions of Americans with credit card debt? Most of those people are NOT "decently managing their finances." Enjoy life in your bubble! |
+1 Airline miles |
And that is exactly what the credit card companies are counting on. They offer these great rewards to get you in the door, expecting that some percentage of people will end up carrying a balance and paying interest & fees. We also run everything through the card and pay it off monthly, but I learned the hard way at about 21 how hard it is to recover if you get even one paycheck behind. I charged 2 weeks of expenses while I was moving for my first real job out of college, and spent the next 5 months paying it off. Small potatoes in the grand scheme of things, but it was a good lesson right as I was getting started, and I swore I would do everything possible to avoid being in that position again. Anyway, we do it now for the same reasons already stated: security, charge protection, travel points (we prefer to buy small trips and save our points for a big trip every 1-3 years - got 2 tickets to Australia this way!), automated categorizing & summaries of expenses. |
Alliant Credit Union. 3% the first year, 2.5% thereafter. |
I also don’t get this post or why the OPs posts seem like this is the first time they’ve heard of credit cards. |
| ^^sorry - I meant I don’t get this thread. I concur with the post I responded to. How else do you pay for things, OP? Big wads of cash? |