How Many Credit Cards Do You Need?
There is no right or wrong answer to this question. But one thing we will say with certainty about this is that you should have as few as you can get by with. Everyone knows how easy it can be to overspend and get into some serious debt. Common sense tells us not to get in over our heads - but common sense is all too often not behind the decisions people make, especially about credit cards. Americans are used to instant gratification and being encouraged to shop. There’s nothing wrong with shopping as such, but credit card debt can quickly get out of hand as many Americans know all too well.
Credit cards are the one of the primary enablers of compulsive spending. Let’s have a look at some of the facts here:
Fact # 1: Each cardholder owns an average of 7 credit cards: three bank credit cards and four store or gas cards (John Gibbons of ABC News online, citing a statistic from www.cardweb.com).
Fact # 2: 60% of U.S. households account for as much as 560 billion dollars in credit card debt. This breaks down to an average of $11,000 per household. (Testimony by Robert Manning to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee)
Fact # 3: Minimum payments tend to be very low - here’s why: when the cardholders make only very small payments, they carry more outstanding debt (and thus more interest payments). As you may recall from high school Latin: Cui Bono? - Who benefits from this?
Fact # 4: Lead blogger Jim at Blueprint For Financial Prosperity gives us this useful fact. Credit card companies, just like the phone company or cable company, want to keep you from going over to their competition. If you contact them about interest payments which you think are too high, they will almost certainly work with you. Call them; you’d be surprised what you can get them to do for you.
Fact # 5: Students who carry a credit card debt of over $1,000.00 tend to drink and smoke more, take medication for depression and have lower grade averages in school. If you think we made this up, it was actually taken from some studies and none other than Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Franklin Galvin, said so.
You’ve got those facts to mull over. Let’s go back to the question of how many credit cards you really need. If we had our way, we’d make it illegal for individuals to carry more than two credit cards. But we’d be banished from this land if we ever campaigned for it.
No one can make you have only two cards. Your financial planner may scowl and your banker sigh, but they can’t stop you from having as many as you’d like.
If we may propose something - If you’ve got more than two cards, why not lock up the excess cards in a secure place to keep temptation at bay? Another idea - When your statement comes each month, make a payment larger than the minimum. After all, the idea is to get out of debt and this will make things happen faster.
The holidays will be here before you known it. You will no doubt overspend using your credit cards. At this tie of year, everyone does. How about this though - after the holidays (we realize it may be impossible to keep from overusing credit during this season) you make a New Year’s resolution: promise yourself that you won’t use your credit card more than once per month? This is a bit like going on a strict diet, but you can and must do this if you want to get a handle on credit card debt.
Just two more facts for you: U.S. cardholders charge as much as 1.8 trillion dollars every year. 1.8 trillion dollars - just think about that number for a minute. 11% of American cardholders pay interest rates of more than 25%! Both of these figures come to us from the U.S. GAO (General Accounting Office).
It is high time that Americans examined the way that they use credit cards and decided to be honest with themselves.
Judging from the debt load of many Americans, the best freedom we can have is freedom from debt. Imagine living day-to-day on credit and barely able to make those hefty monthly payments. If you had zero debt, that’s certainly something to be proud of! Why not have zero debt as your # 1 priority for 2008?
We know that not every person is willing or able to limit themselves to only two credit cards. If you can keep on top of payments and keep your spending under control, then you can have all the cards you like. Another suggestion, if we may - don’t take your cards with you when you go shopping. If you have to pay cash for your purchases, you’d be surprised what you can go without.
Patience is a sublime virtue. Why not wait until you have the cash to pay for it? For all you know, you just might decide that it was merely a whim - certainly something you can get by without!

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