
Pridepuffs
Need a bit of the RL financial advice from anybody willing to lend it.

Pridepuffs
So I don't own a credit card, because I've generally gone through life with the opinion of:
That's Bait

Pridepuffs
But I'm looking at making a big purchase in the near-ish future and while I could just pay for it upfront, it would put a dent in my bank account to do so and it's made me think mmmmaaaaybe this is an opportunity to dip my toe in the pool, spread the cost out over a few months instead of paying it all at once.

Pridepuffs
So. Any advice on credit cards you think are good or make for good first credit cards, would be appreciated!

HEY LISTEN
credit cards are fine as long as you stay on top of getting the balance to 0 pretty quick. the recommendation is to use it for the small monthly auto payments and just pay it off each month. using it for big ticket money items is fine but doing that too much is how they lock you into debt hell

lupin.
^^^ what Jeva said

lupin.
I use a credit card for my expenses each month just to build credit but I always ALWAYS pay the full balance when due

lupin.
Depending on your big ticket item it may also be worth it to see if they have store credit cards that offer 0% APR for a period of time

lupin.
I bought my couches that way

lupin.
And my washer/dryer

lupin.
that way you can make small payments without interest over a period of time so long as it's paid in full by the time 0% APR expires

lupin.
other than store credit cards I use capital one venture, which also gives me free miles I can put towards plane tickets which works for me as someone living away from family now. I saved up enough for $100 off my recent ticket purchase and it was nice

lupin.
but if you get a general one like capital one it's best NOT to spread the payment over a period of a few months due to interest so

lupin.
waggles hands

Pixel
I've used a credit card vs cash for nearly 20 years (but I am in Canada mind you) so they are much safer than debit cards, plus I love the tap and pay thing. The trick is to get a card that costs nothing but also gives you some payback so you get a bit of money for buying stuff with it. In my case the Costco Credit card has a 1% cashback

Pixel
As others have said, it is best to pay as fast as possible

Pixel
I usually try to pay back everything each month, or at the very latest, the month after

Pixel
I've disputed about 4 things total over the years, and got my money back each time. It would have been really hard with a bank (one time it was online fraud where the perpetrators bought some ontario city bus cards at 100$ a piece, I know which store probably used my credit card info too)

Pixel
I nearly had to argue in regards to an Air Canada plane ticket during Covid, but thankfully Air Canada backed down after the goverment ordered them to issue refunds

Pixel
Some cards also include additional insurance (aka you automatically have traveler's insurance in some)

Pixel
And as was said, try not to spread your payments too much, because the amount they add is always ridiculous like 21% or something

Pixel
Credit cards are really best when you can pay with them and want the insurance / premiums they come with

Pixel
lupin.
: also has great advice since a lot of stores have financing with 0% APR if you get their credit card

Pridepuffs
So don't do big purchases unless I can get it at low or zero interest, it's better to use a credit card for regular expenses that you can immediately pay off to improve your credit/take advantage of perks like cashback?

Pridepuffs
Is that the general gist?

HEY LISTEN
yep

Kia
yep

Kia
I use mine for gas

holy shipp
yep

Pixel
Yeap, that's how I see it. When I bought big things, I had to money to pay for it or we split with me and my partner

lupin.
yeup nods

Tetradecimal
if you want to go for a credit card, know that different cards may reject you if you don't have any credit history/low credit score. back when I was churning I'd use nerdwallet as one resource to figure out which cards to go for

Tetradecimal
IIRC some card application processes also involve a "hard pull" on your credit, which could ding your credit score, so there's no point in applying for a hard to get card and hurting it for nothing

Tetradecimal
if you have more established credit history, you can look at cards that give bonuses, like cashback or miles. One of my favs gives me 2% back on everything