When it comes to choosing a credit card , consumers need to be shrewd. To expand on this idea, I think it’s also important that consumers are aware of the way their payments are allocated when they pay their credit card bill each month. Although the Credit CARD Act addressed many of the sneaky practices of credit card companies, it also created a loophole in the provisions for payment allocation that leaves consumers in the cold. Before the CARD Act, credit card companies almost always applied consumers’ credit card payments to the balance with the lowest APR first. This was advantageous for the credit card companies because it allowed them to assess the highest APR for the longest period of time, thus maximizing their profits from interest charges. The CARD Act, effective February of this year, changed this practice and created rules around payment allocation that required credit card companies to apply consumers’ payments to the balance with highest APR first. The only problem: the rule only requires payments above the minimum to be applied to your highest APR balance. According to a FINRA National Survey, 29 percent of consumers have only paid the minimum payment at some point in the last 12 months. With the way the CARD Act is written, this segment of consumers receives absolutely no benefit in terms of the way credit card companies allocate their payments. In addition, the language in the payment allocation provisions ensures that at least some portion of everyone’s payments is applied to their credit card balance in an unfair manner. The Credit CARD Act in general has done a good job in making it difficult for credit card companies to engage in deceptive practices the way they did in the past. However, in this one instance, it has provided the opportunity for credit card companies to fall into old habits with the backing of the law. Therefore, until the payment allocation rules get revised by either Congress or the Federal Reserve, it is important that consumers take precautions to protect themselves from the pitfalls of an unfair payment allocation system. In order to truly take advantage of the new rules, you need to pay well above the

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Beware, a Credit Card Payment Allocation Loophole May Cost You Money
