I had a mortgage in the UK that was 1.46%, that was a nice deal.heading back to the era of no/low interest
not gonna happen….
The banks do know how much you earn, eg/ie, BankSA do list the category of income, "government payments" and the pension that is entered fortnightly into my mums account.I've never heard of such a thing. How would a bank know your post retirement income and why would they check? I've had credit cards since 1998 and retired 10.5 years and had about 5 cards approved since. I'm on a government pension and topped up by a part age pension so not a big income.
I'm about to apply for my next card for maximum sign on bonus points so probable won't get it approved after putting a hex on myself by writing this!
Amex discourage this @willclanI wonder why people worry about the CC limit. As a retiree I have two cards with very low limits at $6,000 each. If I need to spend say $20k on something like a trip, then I transfer that amount into my CC, so I can still use the card, but using my own money, it has never been a problem. The limits are not an issue.
Today I had a win for the 'old guy' when I was approved for a Virgin Money CC...
This will be the first FF CC I have had in many years and, certainty since retiring.
Have not heard of anyone having success. May have another shot at HSBC (if I can be bothered) shortly.Hey gang,
Has anyone had any luck with CC approvals though retired and showing no income? I have seen some posts back in 2020-2022 but all very sporadic information
1. If so, could you please kindly share what banks they are
2. Any with higher approval rate based on your experience
3. The banks that I am considering would be: Amex Charge, QFF points, or HSBC Alliance
4. Anything that would give a higher chance of approval?
5. And the creditsavvy score is sitting at 900+
EDIT: 6. Have had a 10k NAB cc for the last 15 years, would that benefit any application?
TIA!
Sure will - you won't lose it.Will my current CC rollover?
ThanksSure will - you won't lose it.
It is just harder to apply once you don't have a salary / regular pay coming in.
For some banks, if you have a regular pension / super payment, that's OK, but for others, it isn't.
My mum retited in 2013 and her bank is happy to roll over the card.I read these reports with trepidation. I am essentially retired but still working a full job. I jave a nice credit card limit. Should I worry when I leave my job (not likely too soon or I could become a private consultant, if colleagues comments are anything to go by!). Will my current CC rollover?
You still might want to think about increasing your credit limit anyway. 20k today could be 10k in 10yrs and 1k in 30yrs.I should say that with the bank where we have the CC we also have reasonable investments so I suppose that helps.
That's looks like good advice. I will look into it.You still might want to think about increasing your credit limit anyway. 20k today could be 10k in 10yrs and 1k in 30yrs.
If you don’t already have a decent Int TX fee free CC, now’s a good time to get one. DCs are fine for day to day spend but won’t work for a Rental Car holding deposit or some hotels.