Anonymous wrote:Citibank has been rescued like 4 times by the taxpayers for complete incompetence
Populated by absolute losers.
Anonymous wrote:This is ridiculous. Of course they didn’t give you notice so you could further game the system by charging a latte every six months. This is on you OP. I have two credit cards that I alternate between so this never happens. Banks aren’t a public welfare agency, they are businesses.
Anonymous wrote:This could have been resolved by buying lunch one time in the card and paying it off
Anonymous wrote:In credit card company vernacular, you are considered a "deadbeat." I'm not even exaggerating a little bit. That's the actual name for people who have a card and don't use it.
Yes, they will cancel it.
Anonymous wrote:You very well may have received a notice
Anonymous wrote:Banks can't leave open, unused lines of credit out there. Open lines of credit means that they can't lend that money to someone else due to capital adequacy requirements. It isn't about back office expenses or them making a minute amount of interest and fees from the account. While 25,000 may not be huge for Citi, multiply that by 10,000. You are talking real money there.
I would be very surprised if this were not a specific term of the credit agreement.
Anonymous wrote:I had this happen to my Citi card as well. I was particularly annoyed since I had a rewards balance that was too low to cash out but still annoying to lose. I ended up reopening the card since doing so recovered my rewards balance. I was also annoyed. I now make a point to put small charges on it every so often.
Anonymous wrote:Is slowly paying down a balance with monthly payments but not charging considered "active?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, I’m note sure why you think they are in the wrong. They are a business and there’s back office expenses. Are you paying an annual fee? If not, why would you expect them to provide services if you aren’t using your card?
Sorry you are dealing with this, and I totally get why you would want & expect a notice first.
I can see why a business wouldn't want to leave a high balance like that open if it's not being used. A record of using and paying regularly is sort of reassurance for them that you are in the habit of paying, you know?