The Best Online Credit Card Sites Offer Added Value
The best online credit card sites have become difficult to find. It’s not that they aren’t there; it’s just that there are so many offering the same thing. Just do a search on your search engine of choice for your particular requirements and you will be rewarded with an abundance of riches. But which of these online credit card sites actually offer the best to you, the potential customer, in terms of service?
The figures almost defy belief. In the United States alone there are currently 641 million credit cards in circulation at the present moment, with 186 million people holding credit cards right now (source: pbs.org) accounting for a staggering $1.5 trillion worth of consumer spending. The best online credit card sites will be responsible for the majority of these, because these will be the major sites for the banks and the credit lenders themselves.
Search for “online credit cards” (i.e. with quotes and therefore looking for that exact phrase) on Google and, at the time of writing, you will be presented with a choice of 556,000 pages on the subject. This is information overload at its most vehement. To filter that down to the best online credit card sites you would need to apply your own special criteria for choice.
But what of the other sites, the sites not owned by the banks or the major lenders? Surely there are other places which offer a Value Added service in addition to the same old “Click Here For A Credit Card” sales patter? Search engines like Google are in the process of helping you out here, because their procedures are seen to be increasingly filtering out duplicate content from the search results in their system. In the medium to long term this will, hopefully, increase diversity and choice for the consumer. It will mean that locating the best online credit card sites will become easier.
This Value Added aspect of the best online credit card sites would probably use a service or technology designed for the Internet. What more appropriate reason to apply for a credit card from the Web than to be able to harness the power of the Web to automate certain features of credit card usage. For example, being able to look at your account online, or be able to order new credit cards or even to make balance transfers to new cards when your present 0 APR period is due to expire. Or what about some other service which can actually save us money? After all, the banks and other lenders are always keen on taking money from us; it would be nice if we found a way of keeping more money for ourselves.
The Internet is about using technology to make our lives easier, not more complicated. One day, when the search engines have filtered out uniformity and the same old sales messages, the best online credit card sites will be the ones that harness that technology to make our use of credit cards and other financial products easier, safer and less costly.
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Help answer the question about online credit card
Can someone deny and online credit card?Like by law all payments made by credit cards HAVE to be accepted right? well, why is it that some sites deny online credit cards from certain countries, and how can you get them to accept it?
September 10th, 2009 at 11:33 am
Follow the instructions, First name, then last name . . .
The merchant will submit the name to the credit card company for verification. As long as the credit card company doesn't have the name wrong, it should work.
September 10th, 2009 at 12:39 pm
How Payment Processing Works
Before being able to accept credit card transactions and other forms of online payments, a merchant will need to set up a merchant account with a bank. A merchant account is the industry term for a business banking relationship whereby you and a bank have arranged to accept credit card payments (usually, a local bank can suffice for this kind of relationship). Setting up a merchant account usually involves the bank understanding your business and working with a third-party processor to arrange a mechanism for accepting payments. For more information on setting up merchant accounts, we recommend you take a look through the http://www.card-gallery.com to get you started in the right direction.
September 10th, 2009 at 11:52 am
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September 11th, 2009 at 12:43 am
As long as you pay at least the minimum payment before the due date, you will be reported as "on time" to the credit bureau. If the second installment is after the due date, you will have to pay interest on your next statement. To avoid paying interest, you have to pay the whole balance before the due date.
September 11th, 2009 at 4:14 pm
Probably millions, and only 3 percent get aproved.
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http://www.bestcreditrates.net
September 12th, 2009 at 2:42 am
No, not at all. Your reply email with your information is probably in line to be reviewed and "looked at". You will receive a reply possibly with a card or not in about a week. Good Luck.
September 12th, 2009 at 5:34 am
Do you have an ATM card with visa/mastercard logo on it?
September 12th, 2009 at 9:04 am
Don't go by rate alone. The only way to compare companies is to compare the total of all fees for the month and divide by your Visa/MasterCard/Discover sales (this is what your rate really is for the month). Include all fees for example; monthly minimum, gateway fees, internet transaction fees, batch fees, network fees, any fees from third party companies besides your processor.
September 12th, 2009 at 10:35 pm
I've applied for a few different cards through such sites and have found them to be safe.
Those types of sites generally link to a credit card application page that is secure (encrypted connection) so you don't have to worry about the personal info you're entering being intercepted by snoops. You can confirm the secure connection by the little padlock symbol in your browser (or the https:// on the front of the URL as previously mentioned).
If you happen to be looking for a rewards card and would like to get the card (or combination of cards) that will pay you the most for your spending profile, you may find this rewards calculator to be useful. It's the only one of its kind I know of:
http://www.creditcardtuneup.com/
September 13th, 2009 at 2:27 am
the only thing more dangerous than someone with bad credit is someone with no credit. they are wary of you since you have no established credit, your a student blah blah blah. it takes them awhile to verify your status, residence, job (if you have one), and your account status. if you had established credit then it wouldn;t necessarily take this long to approve or deny your application. if you do get this one and are financilly responsible; when you apply for other cards in the future, the response time will be a lot quicker. basically, once they can pin you down, see you can make payments, you'll get it.