Accident Ahead: 10 Credit Card Traps 1. More Late Fees Credit card companies are reaping more profit from late fee income than ever before, for three reasons: (1) the average late fee more than doubled between 1992 and 2000, from $12.53 to $27.61, (2) companies have decreased the amount of time between when they mail a bill and when payment is due, and (3) nearly two-thirds of companies have eliminated leniency periods, (the time after a payment's due date before a late fee is assessed). 2. Higher Over-the-Limit Fees In 2000, only one card charged a fee of less than $20 to consumers who had exceeded their credit limits. The highest fee was $35. In contrast, a 1995 survey found only one bank that charged a fee of $20 or more. Many companies assess this fee to cardholders who exceed their limits by as little as $1. 3. Hidden Transaction Fees Fees for cash advances, balance transfers, and quasi-cash transactions like the purchase of lottery tickets significantly raise the cost of these transactions. But the terms governing these transactions are buried in the fine print where consumers can easily miss them. Minimum fees, also stated only in the fine print, allow credit card companies to guarantee themselves high fee income regardless of the transaction amount. For example, if XCard has a transaction fee of 3% and a minimum of $10, a cardholder who receives a $50 cash advance will be charged the minimum, $10, which amounts to an actual transaction fee of 20%.
4. Punitive Annual Percentage Rate (APR) Increases The average penalty APR—a higher interest rate triggered by a late or missed payment—is nearly eight percentage points higher than the average regular (non-penalty, non-introductory) APR. In 1998, by contrast, penalty APRs were an average of 4.5 percentage points higher than regular APRs. 5. Declining Grace Periods While grace periods (the time during which a transaction does not accrue interest) historically were a full month long, they now average 23 days. Some cards have no grace periods at all. 6. Introductory APRs Fifty-seven percent of card offers advertised a low introductory APR. The aver
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