• @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      Doesn’t matter to me. I have like 10 different credit cards to get the best cash back depending where I’m shopping. Currently the best I get at Microsoft would be 2% so this is a pretty sweet card.

          • MrScottyTay
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            12 years ago

            Credit scores usually go down with every new card you get, it only goes up when you’ve been stable with current card(s) (usually for, house etc (usually for 1-3 years range). Cause then they know you’re reliable with money in your current life situation.

            • @[email protected]
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              22 years ago

              Getting a new card will temporarily drop your score a few points.

              If you’re like me that charges everything to a credit card, then you need a lot of available credit to keep the credit utilization low. You want it below 10%.

              High credit utilization is going to drop your score more than opening a new card.

              Say I have 1 card that has 15k limit. If I spend 10k on it. I have a 66% credit utilization. My score would be horrible.

              Now, if I get 7 cards and each have 15k limits. If I spend 10k on them then I have less than a 10% credit utilization and my score would be good.

              Can I get 1 or 2 cards that have credit limit of 105k. Yes. But I have found increasing limit is harder than getting a new card.

              With a new card you can get 0% apr which is free borrowing of money for 12 to 15 months.

              You can get a welcome bonus which are usually very good.

              And you can set it up so that you might be getting more rewards like 5% cash back on dinning or other things that another card might not give.

              Getting more cards has it’s advantages

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Yes but if you need 1500 points at minimum before you can cash out, that means you aren’t seeing any cash back until you’ve spent $300 at Microsoft. The payout might be bigger, but you have to wait a lot longer to get it.

        If that’s worth it for you, that’s great! But if I’m spend $60 at Microsoft a few times a year, I might rather just have $1.20 next month that I can spend on many things than $3.00 in two years that I can only spend at Microsoft.