Finance Metric - Measure And Fulfill Your Financial Needs measure and fulfill your financial needs
Our Partners:  Lending Tree  |  myFICO  |  Lexington Law  |  LowerMyBills  |  Legal Zoom  
  Home
Local Business Listings
 Accountant
 Banks
 Bankruptcy
 Credit & Debt Counseling Services
 Credit Unions
 Credit Reporting Agencies
 Credit Card Companies
 Financial Planning
 Home Loan
 Personal Loan
 Real Estate
 Retirement Planning
 Savings & Loan Associations
 Social Security
 Stocks & Bond Brokers
 Tax Return Preparation
Finance Q & A
  Home Loan
  Home Equity
  Student Loan
  Credit Report
  Credit Repair
  Retirement Plans
  Identity Fraud
  Debt Consolidation
  Personal Finance
  Living Trust
  Interest Rate
  Credit Card
  Life Insurance
  Home Insurance
  Health Insurance
  Bill Pay
  Mutual Funds
  Tax Savings
  Tax Shelter
  Stock Trading
  Real Estate Property
All About Finance
  Finance Books
  Finance Articles
  Loan Info Search
  Loan Directory

Question: How will my credit score be affected by cancelling my credit card?

Home  » Credit Card

Question : How will my credit score be affected by cancelling my credit card?
I have had this credit card for 2 years now, and it charges an annual fee (it is designed for people with little credit and they report monthly to the bureaus). Less than a month ago, I was approved for a credit card with no fees and a lower interest rate. I would like to cancel the old card because I don't want to pay the annual fee, but how will affect my credit score? Should I keep it open?
- asked by Nicky G

All Answers:
Answer #1
call them and ask them to waive anual fee sinceanother companay approved you and you can closeand transfer any balance and they will I'll betyou. Also Open the new card but do not close theold one as yes it will hurt your scores
- answered by golferwhoworks

Answer #2
While having credit accounts with long historiesis good, I don't think it's worth paying an annualfee. One of the main things lenders look for isyour ration of the available credit to yourcurrent balance. In other words, its better tohave several credit cards but not use them (exceptin emergency). But there are hundreds of cardsout ther woth no annual fees.
- answered by IceBoxx

Answer #3
if this is your only credit card then yes closingit will shorten you history and will hurt you.
- answered by LD

Answer #4

http://www.theconsolidationclinic.com <-- theyhave pretty good answeres on both consolidationand settlements.
- answered by HelpMe

Answer #5
Noooooooooooo don't close it...atleast not yet.You most definetly want that good history to stayon your credit report. I know that annual fees canbe a pain....but the wonders it will do for yourscore is worth it.
- answered by Anjell

Answer #6
if it significantly changes your balance toavailable credit ratio it can hurt your score.Forexample... if you have 2 credit cards:1. Limit:5000 Used: 0 Available: 50002. Limit: 10000 Used:5000 Available: 5000your ratio would be 5000/15000(30%)if you closed #1 your new ratio would be5000/10000 (50%)that would be bad.Open a new cardw/o a fee to replace the one with a fee, thenclose the one with the fee.
- answered by boilerette72

Answer #7
If its one of the oldest cards you have it mighthurt your score to close it. If it not, itprobably won't. A better idea is to keep it open,call their 800 customer service number and askthem to waive the annual fee. I'll bet they willsince they already know many other cards don'tcharge a fee and they don't want to lose you as acustomer. Remember, even without charging you anannual fee they make money every time you usetheir card and they don't want to lose that incomeif they don't have to.
- answered by John Harris

Answer #8
Given what appears to be a relatively short amountof credit history, I would suggest keeping thecard open, even if you simply cut up the card, andgo ahead and pay the annual fee for a couple ofyears more... The reason is simple....One of thekey elements in calculating credit score is thelength of time in the bureau, and another is theage of the accounts you currently have. Thebenefit to your credit rating is huge for havingthat older account, and the potential impact ishuuuuge!For what the annual fee costs you on theolder card, you would probably make that up injust one car payment, should you be able to get itat a rate below 10%, as opposed to one of the morelikely 17-20% rates for a person with a lowerscore...The difference in a 18% interest rate anda 6% interest rate on a $25K car note is about$150/mo. !!! Compare THAT to your annual fee, andsee if it doesn't make sense to go ahead and justkeep the older card.Not to mention the impact ifyou were to get a $150K mortgage at 7% instead of10%... The savings there would be about$315/mo!!!!!I hope this helps!For more help andinformation, visit thesesites...
http://www.bestcredityet.com
http://creditgecko.com
http://www.omegacreditrepair.com
- answered by Credit Guru




source:
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | © 2012 Financial Metric. All Rights Reserved
Powered By Pacific Cape, Inc.