Gulf News

Managing your first credit card wisely

Avoiding an annual fee on your first credit card is a budget-friendly move

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Getting your first credit card is like moving into your first apartment: It’s exciting, empowering — and, once you get used to it, pretty underwhelm­ing.

Your first time out, “you’re not going to have a credit card that is going to have a high limit,” says Paul Golden, spokesman for the National Endowment for Financial Education in the United States. “It’s not going to have great benefits or kickbacks or reward programmes probably tied to it. And that’s OK.”

A starter credit card is just that: a start. Used responsibl­y, it’s a way to build a positive credit history, which will help you with things like getting a better deal on a mortgage or cheaper car insurance” and it will help you qualify for a card with better terms down the road — for example, one with richer rewards. Here’s what you should look for.

Ease of approval

When you have a thin credit file and limited income, you’re not likely to qualify for a card packed with benefits. Instead, aim for something more basic

If you already have a credit history that shows consistent on-time payments and responsibl­e borrowing — say, from repaying student loans — it’s possible to qualify for a regular “unsecured” credit card that doesn’t require a deposit. To increase your odds of approval, apply through the bank you already use or with a preapprove­d offer received in the mail. If you’re in college, look into a student credit card.

Don’t have a credit history yet? Consider applying for a secured card, one that requires a cash deposit. Or ask a parent to add you as an authorised user on a card with history of ontime payments and a balance that’s far below the limit.

No annual fees

Avoiding an annual fee on your first credit card is a budget-friendly move that allows you to keep the card open for a long time at no cost. That can bolster your credit scores if you continue to make on-time payments on the account.

Useful rewards

When Zina Kumok applied for her first credit card at 22, she wanted a sign-up bonus — one that she could earn easily.

“I wasn’t making a lot, and I was trying not to spend a lot” at the time, says Kumok, now 29, a freelance writer in Indianapol­is who covers personal finance.

“I didn’t want to feel like I was being pressured to spend more to reach a bonus, which obviously never works out in your favour,” she says. Kumok opted for a card with versatile cashback rewards and a sign-up bonus with a modest spending requiremen­t.

Follow Kumok’s lead: Look for a card that will reward you for the spending you’re already doing to avoid overspendi­ng to land a sign-up bonus.

Keep in mind that cards with rewards tend to charge higher interest rates. But if you expect to pay your bill in full every month, that shouldn’t be a deal-breaker. “The APR (annual percentage rate) only matters if you don’t pay off your balance,” Kumok says.

Reporting to all 3 bureaus

Your first credit card has a simple purpose: to demonstrat­e to lenders that you can handle credit responsibl­y so you can borrow money when you need it later on.

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