Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It won't be waived. Your only other option is to do a balance transfer to another card with 0% interest and pay it all off within the period.
This is the only useful answer.
Signed,
A bankruptcy attorney
If this were a responsible adult we're talking about then I agree with this approach...I do this as a means of making my money work for me instead of for the credit card company. So in the right hands, yes this is a very good financial tool but in the hands of OP? A 21 year old who didn't realize that his/her impulse purchase would eventually have to be paid for?
All this is doing is putting off the inevitable. If OP cant get a whopping her computer paid off- what makes you think putting it off onto another card for another year will help? OP will most likely do what he/she did with the first card. Put it away and forget about it until D-Day. Hell, at this rate she will have upgraded to another computer and still be paying for as computer that is now in a landfill.
Having said ALL that, if this were my kid I would have them move it to a 0% card and then monitor them to make sure it was getting paid off. Perhaps we can all become his/her parents and have him check in with us monthly with his pay-off progress
OP - Do you want to rent some responsible DCUM parents for a year? We won't charge you