Skip Navigation
 

Use This Credit Card To Clear Your Overdraft

Serena Cowdy

By

Serena Cowdy

From the Fool blog

Christmas comes early for Centrica investors

Published in Credit Cards on 11 July 2008

I explain the easiest -- and cheapest -- way to demolish overdraft debts!

A couple of weeks ago, I found myself almost at the edge of my £1400 overdraft limit. Given that only £500 of it is interest-free, that wasn’t a good position to be in!

I also had a credit card - with around £750 on it - which was nearing the end of its 0% deal.

So - how did I get rid of these looming interest payments?

0% money transfer

As I explained in Cut Your Interest Payments Down To Zero, many credit cards allow you to transfer money from the card into your bank account.

Unfortunately, they usually charge very high rates of interest on this sort of cash advance, far higher than you would pay with most personal loans or overdrafts.

However - there are a few cards that allow you to transfer cash into your bank account and still take advantage of the card's 0% balance transfer benefits.

So, for as long as the 0% balance transfer deal lasts, you don’t pay any interest on the cash you borrowed on the credit card.

I think the Virgin Money MasterCard is one of the best cards for doing this, because the 0% balance transfer deal currently lasts for a whopping 15 months.

Virgin charge a 2.98% transfer fee on balance transfers from other credit cards, and on money transfers into bank accounts.

I applied for this card last week.

How it works

In a nutshell, I applied online and then answered a few follow-up questions on the phone. Fortunately for me, I was accepted.

I organised the transfer to my bank account on the phone rather than online (there didn’t seem to be a section of the form that dealt with this), and was told that everything would be sorted (credit card transfer and bank transfer) in 7-10 days. Bonza!

The benefits

Because of the balance transfer fees, shifting debt in this way isn’t free. However, 2.98% is a much lower rate than those charged by personal loans. Here’s what I paid:

 

Bank account transfer

Fee for bank account transfer

Card balance transfer

Fee for card balance transfer

Total amount borrowed

Total fees paid

£1400

£41.72

£749

£22.32

£2149

£64.04

 

So, on a 15 month loan, I’m paying back just 2.98% more than I borrowed on the card - far less than the interest I would have paid if I’d left my money where it was.

And on my budget, I should be able to comfortably clear the balance before the 0% deal comes to an end.

So what’s the catch?

Used cannily, this card could save you a lot of money. But credit card providers - Virgin included - are obviously out to make a profit. Watch out for the following snags!

•         The Virgin card also offers a three-month, 0% deal on new purchases. While this seems like a nice extra (and they tempt you with juicy discounts if you spend), I wouldn’t purchase anything on the card unless I could clear the balance every month.

This is because Virgin operates negative payment hierarchy. Basically, this means you pay off the 0% debt first, whilst your purchase and cash withdrawals remain on the credit card racking up lots of extra interest. Not good!

•         You’ll be offered (and encouraged to buy) both payment protection insurance and identity theft insurance.

Personally, I turned both these down. As Fool writer Cliff D’Arcy has highlighted time and again, the PPI sold with financial products is usually incredibly bad value.

And even worse - Virgin classes both PPI and identity theft insurance as ‘retail transactions’ - so interest would be charged on these after just three months!

•         Don’t, whatever you do, be late with your payments. If you don’t pay the minimum amount back on time, every month, your interest-free deal will be whipped away from you.

You’ll end up paying a typical APR of 15.9% instead - and you may well be hit with other penalty charges as well. Not a nice thought.

To avoid this happening, set up a direct debit to make the minimum payment on your card every month - or more if you can afford it.

•         Finally, as with all credit card applications, you won’t find out what your credit limit is until you’re accepted for the card. If your limit turns out not to be enough to clear your overdraft as well as your other credit cards, you may wish you hadn’t bothered.

Unfortunately there’s no way round this at the moment - but it’s something to be aware of.

To make the most of this sort of deal, you need to do your research thoroughly and avoid the the tricks that could cost you a fortune.

If you’re canny, the Virgin card could save you a lot of money in interest payments. Hopefully, in 15 months I’ll have cleared my debt and cut up my card. I’ll keep you posted!

There’s a great range of cards at Fool.co.uk’s credit card centre.

Share & subscribe

Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

debtwagon 12 Jul 2008, 8:25am

Another thing to be careful about with MBNA (which issues the Virgin card) is the monthly minimum payment, which may be set very small, e.g. £5, so don't just set up a direct debit for the min payment and forget about it, otherwise you'll still have a fair old balance to worry about at the end of the 0% period.

rowlystravel 14 Jul 2008, 3:14pm

there was a technical error with my DD to begin with and as i didnt set it back up the minimum payment is only £25.. this suits me as i always pay way over this amount but last month a home emergency meant i only had to pay £25 as a one off... also they aggressively promote credit card cheques, please destroy these when you get them as they are a big no no!!

Jango77 28 Jul 2008, 8:54pm

Hello there,

Inspired by what I read above, I have just been speaking to the Halifax in relation to a Halifax One card I have with them. Apparently, Halifax do not offer this service as they can only transfer to another credit card or store card? What is it I am doing wrong or was the person I spoke to just being thick?

Any advice gladly welcome

miekje 29 Jul 2008, 10:39am

The thing is that if you have a poor credit rating, such as a few times going over the credit limit on a credit card (due to miss-sold PPI and very low minimal payments) your application for almost all new credit cards will be rejected. My partner can't even get a credit card from 'The People's Postoffice'!

Join the conversation

Instructions

Line breaks are converted automatically.

You may use the following tags in your post: <b>bold</b>, <i>quoted text</i>. All other tags will be removed from your post.

Hello stranger

To add your own comment, please login.

Not yet registered? Register now.