Anonymous wrote:Yes this is a known, substantive risk for credit card issuers, something they expend significant resources to prevent- it's called "bust out fraud". Nowadays its more around what's called "synthetic identity", where someone gets a bunch of credit cards around a name/SSN that doesn't actually exist.
https://www.transunion.com/blog/how-to-prevent-bust-out-fraud
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Credit Karma says that 11-20 open accounts is "fair" and 21+ is excellent, so 12 credit cards is not high. Why would she ask to lower her available credit. The more credit she has, the lower the utilization, the higher her credit score. I don't think you know what you are talking about.
Can you do this to the CC companies?
You are near retirement with 21 credit cards with 50K available per card, and a payoff home, cars, and lot of money in your pension and 401K. 21 CCs equal 1.1M in available credit. Can you spend that amount by traveling around the world for the next five years at 200K per year while just paying the minimum amount? Once the money run out, you can just declare bankruptcy. In most states, CC companies can not go after your home, social security, pension and 401K. To my knowledge, CC debt is unsecured debt. I do not see any downsides to this, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Credit Karma says that 11-20 open accounts is "fair" and 21+ is excellent, so 12 credit cards is not high. Why would she ask to lower her available credit. The more credit she has, the lower the utilization, the higher her credit score. I don't think you know what you are talking about.
Can you do this to the CC companies?
You are near retirement with 21 credit cards with 50K available per card, and a payoff home, cars, and lot of money in your pension and 401K. 21 CCs equal 1.1M in available credit. Can you spend that amount by traveling around the world for the next five years at 200K per year while just paying the minimum amount? Once the money run out, you can just declare bankruptcy. In most states, CC companies can not go after your home, social security, pension and 401K. To my knowledge, CC debt is unsecured debt. I do not see any downsides to this, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Credit Karma says that 11-20 open accounts is "fair" and 21+ is excellent, so 12 credit cards is not high. Why would she ask to lower her available credit. The more credit she has, the lower the utilization, the higher her credit score. I don't think you know what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:I have about twelve credit cards, and each card has an available credit of 15K. I also do not carry a balance because I payoff the balance every month. I normally use one credit card each month, and rotate them after that. For the past two weeks, I receive notices from ten credit card companies that my available credit has been increased from 15K to 50K. Anyone know why they increase my available credit line? FWIW, my credit score is 830. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Credit Karma says that 11-20 open accounts is "fair" and 21+ is excellent, so 12 credit cards is not high. Why would she ask to lower her available credit. The more credit she has, the lower the utilization, the higher her credit score. I don't think you know what you are talking about.
+1000
I put everything on CC if I can (ie no extra fee for charging to the card). Always pay in full. Some months my credit gets dinged, because my utilization is too high. I don't need credit so don't care really, but it's best to have a very high credit amount, so I can charge $20-25K+ and not take a major hit on my credit rating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Credit Karma says that 11-20 open accounts is "fair" and 21+ is excellent, so 12 credit cards is not high. Why would she ask to lower her available credit. The more credit she has, the lower the utilization, the higher her credit score. I don't think you know what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.
Anonymous wrote:Wait you have cards from 10 different companies? 12 cards is high but within reason, but why so many companies?
Anyway, yes sometimes card issuers will give you a credit increase on their own. You can always call and ask them to put it back to the lower number. Because you already have so much credit, this won't really affect your score either way.