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Index › Finance & Banking › Loans & Funding
 

Low APR Credit Cards

 
Author: Beth Pardue

Many credit card companies use the term low APR to promote their credit card offers. But how do you know if the card you are applying for is really a low APR credit card? To determine whether this is accurate or not, you're going to have to look at the fine print of these claims.

Here is some basic interest rate information to help you determine if a "low APR credit card" is really "high interest rate credit rip-off".

Keep in mind that interest rates are variable. Credit card rates are set by adding a spread, or margin, to a base rate. Your base rate is often a widely used index rate, which is almost always a rate that changes periodically, without warning and for no reason.

The spread that is added to calculate your rate depends on your credit history. If you pay your bills consistently and on time, the spread may be as few as 2 or 3 percentage points. If your credit history reveals that you make late payments, or have too much debt, the spread may be 5 or 6 percentage points or more.

The advertised rate on a credit card is often the card's simple interest rate. The effective interest rate, however, is your true cost of borrowing and includes annual fees you pay to use the card. The compounded interest rate is a better barometer of your effective interest rate. For example, if your card has a rate of 12%, your monthly rate would be 1%. Because credit card interest is compounded monthly, the effective annual interest rate on a 12% simple-rate card is 12.68%. By doing a little research, you could save yourself a lot of money in interest in the long run.

Note: This article may be freely reproduced as long as the authors bio paragraph at the bottom of this article is included, the article is published as is (unedited) and all URLs are made active hyperlinks with no syntax changes.

Author Bio:
Beth Pardue is a popular columnist. Beth likes to pen down articles about this area.
You can search for this article using: college loans, student loans, personal loans, home loans, bad credit loans, countrywide home loans
 
 
 

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