Credit
Card Glossary
Balance
Transfer - This
is the process by which a balance on one credit
card or loan can be
moved to another credit card.
Beacon
Score - The
proprietary name given to the FICO score when it
is purchased from Equifax, a
credit reporting agency.
Billing
Cycle - The date that your statement is
produced every month. The payment due date is at
least 22 later. This same date appears on every
statement, regardless of holidays. Interest
accrues at the time the statement cycles.
Cash
Advance - Cash
advances are actually cash loans taken from the
financial institution
that owns the account. A cash advance is usually
performed one of three ways;
-
By
using a credit card with a PIN at an ATM,
-
By
going to the bank and presenting the credit card
to a teller along with a second
form of identification, or
-
By
using a convenience check.
Convenience
Checks -
Convenience checks allow you to access their
credit card accounts
in situations where credit cards are not
accepted. Convenience checks are accepted
and processed like any other check, except they
access the available credit on the
cardholder’s credit card account. When
processed, the amount of the check appears on the
monthly credit card statement as a cash advance
purchase.
Credit
Card - Credit
cards are a form of revolving loan by where the
cardholder can access a
line of credit to make purchases, cash advances,
or balance transfers. As the outstanding
balance is paid, the available credit line is
restored for use again.
Credit
Limit - The
amount of credit made available for you to use.
Debit Card - A debit card is a combination of a credit card
and an ATM card. Debit cards carry a credit card
logo, such as MasterCard, allowing the card to
be used anywhere a credit card can be used. The
card can also be used anywhere an ATM card is
accepted. Purchases made with a debit card are
deducted from a checking account instead of a
credit line.
Expiration
Date - This
indicates in which month and year the card
expires. The card is valid
until the last day of the month indicated, after
the last day of the next month; the card
cannot be used to make a purchase if the
merchant attempts to obtain an authorization.
Fee - A
fee is a charge to an account such as a late
fee, an over-limit fee, or a statement copy fee.
FICO Score - The FICO score is a numeric weight that is used
by financial institutions to predict the
likelihood of a customer to pay. The FICO score
is generated by information gathered on the
credit bureaus, and is produced by Fair Isaac
Company (FICO) and then supplied to the 3 credit
bureaus (Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion). The
score is used to make credit decisions such as
approving or declining an application,
increasing or decreasing a credit line, or
setting the Annual Percentage Rate.
Finance
Charge - The
interest charged on a credit card account. This
is the cost of the account to
you. This is split into interest charge on
purchases, balance transfers, and interest
charged on cash advances.
Fixed Rate - An Annual
Percentage Rate that does not fluctuate
according to a published index but
stays at the same rate until the issuer notifies
the cardholder of a change in terms.
Grace
Period - The time a financial institution
gives the cardholder to repay their balance. The
grace period is at least 22 days, which means
that your Payment Due Date is at least 22 days
after the Billing Cycle date.
Interest -
The finance charge on an account.
Introductory
Rate - A lower
APR that is fixed for a certain length of time,
usually 6 months,
for new credit card accounts.
Late Fee -
This is a charge made to a credit card account
when the payment is made after the
payment due date.
Minimum
Finance Charge -
The amount set as the minimum charged when an
account revolves
with a balance.
Minimum
Payment - The
minimum monthly payment on a credit card
account. This is usually a
set dollar amount or a percentage of the
balance, whichever is greater.
Overlimit - An account is
overlimit if the balance on the account is
greater than the credit limit of the account.
There is usually a fee when this occurs.
Past Due -
A term used to describe an account when there is
an outstanding payment due on the
account which has not been made.
Penalty
Pricing -
Penalty pricing automatically increases the
interest rate when an account
becomes delinquent. The account usually remains
at the increased interest rate levels for
a specific time period before moving back to the
standard interest rate.
Personal
Identification Number (PIN) -
The number used to access their account to get cash
at an ATM machine or make other PIN verified transactions. A number automatically
generated by the computer, then sealed and sent
to the cardholder. (Ex. Gas
station charges)
Phishing -
A term used to describe an act of sending an
email to a user pretending to be an
established business to convince the user to
provide personal information to be used for
identity theft. The email invites the user to
visit their website to update personal information,
passwords, and/or credit card or bank account
numbers or Social Security Numbers.
Prime Rate - Prime is the
base rate on corporate loans posted by at least
75% of the nation’s
30 largest banks. The Prime Rate is set by the
Federal Reserve and is used as an
indicator of the current U.S. economic
environment. This rate is used to determine the Annual
Percentage Rate on variable accounts.
Variable
Rate - An
Annual Percentage Rate that goes up or down
based on fluctuations in
interest rates as reflected in a published index
(such as the Prime Rate).
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