Frugal Living » Debt Smart: One day late, yeah right!

Debt Smart: One day late, yeah right!

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I knew it, I knew it, I knew it!
A couple years ago most credit card banks changed their policy of what “late” means to meaning “one day late is late.” It used to be that late was if your payment was due on the 1st but received on, say, the 20th. Not anymore. If you’re 24 hours late, it’s late, and you will be charged the late fee. Late fees have also been rising and some are now as high as $35!

What did I know?

I had the feeling that since being one day late means that banks can charge a late fee, it’s possible that, well, payments could “accidentally” be held for say, oh, 24 hours. Oops, you’re late!

My theory was a step closer to confirmation when one of my credit card payments was exactly one day late. I always track everything–every check, every payment date, and all transactions. I use Quicken and other custom software I developed to pay my bills. So when I was late by one day I took a look at the date that bank’s check was mailed.


Guess how early I mailed the payment?

Seven days!

The 8th day was the late day. I called the bank and told them that they’d better waive that fee or I would transfer my balance and close the account. They did waive the fee for me, but I wonder how many other people don’t call to waive these one-day-late fees?
I wonder how many people simply pay the late fee because they figure “I was late.” Being exactly one day late has happened to many people I know. I asked them if they called the bank to complain and they said that they didn’t because they thought they were actually late.
Tell you what, being one day late isn’t worth 35 bucks! There is no way that it costs the bank $35 for someone to be one day late.

The way I see it is that it’s like being mugged in an alley!

As it turns out my theory is even closer to confirmation. Look at those small slips of paper with fine print that come with your statement. Many of those papers are lawsuit notifications from banks that are accused of “not crediting payments promptly,” and charging late fees.
The funny thing is that in these class action lawsuits, when the smoke clears, the lawyers get paid millions and most of us only get back a few cents! Every case that I’m involved in, because I’m a cardholder, has been settled without the bank having to admit any wrongdoing.

What can we do?

Be sure to look at every charge on your credit card statement. Don’t let the bank get away with charging you a late fee. I don’t care if it’s really your fault for being late!
First of all, it doesn’t matter because $35 is a rip-off for being 24 hours late. And, second of all, the bank should treat you like gold for being a good customer, and should waive at least one late fee as a courtesy even if it IS your fault.

One day late, yeah right!
by Scott Bilker

© Can Stock Photo Inc. / iqoncept

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2 thoughts on “Debt Smart: One day late, yeah right!”

  1. Or you go to the bank and pay the bill in person on the due date and they still charge you interest the next month because you are 10 days into the new month. I cancelled my line of credit one month after getting it because they did that to me. Their explanation for it?

    “Someone didn’t explain things to you”.

    Reply
  2. Best bet is to not use credit cards. Prepaid debit cards are a much safer way to go. Plus if your card does get lost or stolen your only out what you had on the card…not the amount of your credit limit.

    Reply

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