THANKSGIVING CLOSING

In observance of Thanksgiving, all Liberty Savings branches will be closed on Thursday, November 28th. We will resume normal business hours on Friday, November 29th. Please enjoy a happy and safe holiday!

Credit cards: what to close and what to keep


If you’ve reached a point where you know you have too many cards and want to trim them to simplify your life or to get your finances under control, think carefully before you act. Some of your credit cards are better than others, so careful consideration is in order.

  1. Decide how many credit cards you really need. You may have applied for a card to earn a bonus or gift, but do you really need as many as you have? More than one or two shouldn’t be necessary. On the other hand, you don’t want to close too many accounts too quickly, since that could lower your capacity, or the amount of credit you have compared with the amount you’ve actually borrowed. If you have a card you don’t need but don’t want to close the account, take the card out of your wallet.
  2. Pay off and close high-interest credit cards. Of course, the first thing to pay off is the high-interest cards because they can eat you alive. Take out all your credit cards, and list them (use a code name, not the account numbers, so your list is of no value if it gets into the wrong hands), the balance, credit limit, interest rate, and fees for each card. This will show you, at a glance, what your credit card situation is. Keep an eye on credit cards that have teaser rates coming due because they will go up soon too.
  3. Look for high fees. This can be tricky, but read the fine print. The cards you keep should be the best ones with the lowest fees. Depending on your balance, a large fee may have even more of an impact on your bottom line than the interest rate. Though you don’t plan on being late, it does happen sometimes, so check out the late fees, too.
  4. Close unused accounts. If they have high rates, you want to close them anyway. But even if they don’t, there’s no reason for inactive accounts to show up on your credit report.
  5. Keep your credit union credit card. Because you do all your banking with the credit union, you’ll want to hold onto this card. Chances are, the rates are better and the fees are lower on this card anyway.

Third Party Disclaimer

By accessing the noted link you will be leaving Liberty Savings Federal Credit Union's website and entering a website hosted by another party. Please be advised that you will no longer be subject to, or under the protection of, the privacy and security policies of Liberty Savings Federal Credit Union's website. We encourage you to read and evaluate the privacy and security policies of the site you are entering, which may be different than those of Liberty Savings Federal Credit Union.


Continue