WHAT CREDIT CARD LEGISLATION MEANS FOR YOU
Posted
by Ismat Sarah Mangla
May 19, 2009 4:18
pm
Consumers
scored a major victory on Tuesday as the Senate voted
overwhelmingly in favor of a bill that restricts unfair credit card
practices. The Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and
Disclosure Act passed by a 90-5 margin. The bill comes on the heels of similar
legislation, known as the Credit Cardholders Bill of Rights, that was approved
by the House on April 30 in 357 to 70 vote.
So what
happens now? The Senate bill heads back to the House for a vote, and there’s a
good chance it could hit the President’s desk before Memorial Day. But what do
both bills mean for your wallet? Let’s look at the key
provisions:
Retroactive rate
hikes: Both bills ban hikes to interest
rates on existing balances. So say you carry a $1,000 balance at 8%. If the rate
on your card changes, the new rate will apply only to new purchases going
forward—the issuer won’t be able to start charging 19% on the previous balance.
The only catch: If you fail to comply with a debt repayment workout plan or if
you are more than 30 days (House bill) or 60 days (Senate bill) late on
payments, all bets are off. What’s more, both bills prevent issuers from raising
your interest rate during the first year of the card
account.
Penalty
periods: If you are late and
your rate goes up, the Senate bill states that if you pay your bill on time for
6 months in a row, you can reclaim the lower rate.
Advance
notification: Time was, your issuer could jack
your card’s rate and only give you 15 days notice. No more. Both bills require
that issuers must give you 45 days notice before making significant interest
rate, fee and finance charge increases.
Teaser
rates: Both bills require that
promotional rates must be offered for at least six
months.
Payment
allocation: You may have a balance transfer on
your card at one rate, while other purchases or balances accrue interest at a
different, higher rate. Before this legislation, banks could apply your payment
to the balance with the lowest interest rate first—so your more costly balance
just kept racking up interest. Now, payments in excess of the minimum amount
owed must first be applied to the balance with the highest interest rate first,
and then to remaining balances in descending order.
Due
dates: Credit card statements must be
mailed 21 days before the bill is due, up from the current 14. And no more odd
timing deadlines for payments—payments received by 5 p.m. on the due date are on
time. Payments with due dates that fall on holidays or weekends must be accepted
by the next business day.
Over-the-limit
fees: Before, if you tried to charge
above your credit limit, the issuer would approve the transaction and slap you
with an “over-the-limit” fee. Now, consumers must opt in for over-the-limit
approval—and the fees that come with it.
Cards for
young adults: The House bill stipulates that
banks can’t issue cards to un-emancipated minors under the age of 18 unless a
parent is the account holder. It also limits college students to just one credit
card, sets credit limits to a percentage of the student’s income and requires
parents to approve increases to credit limits on joint accounts. The Senate bill
takes it even further, eliminating credit cards for people under the age of 21
unless an adult co-signs or they can show proof of
income.
Gift
cards: The House bill doesn’t touch
them, but the Senate bill states that gift cards can’t expire in less than five
years. Retailers selling Visa, MasterCard, American Express or Discover-branded
gift cards will have to print information on dormancy fees—charged when the card
goes unused for a while—right on the cards
themselves.
Universal
default: Both bills eliminate this
practice, which allows a card issuer to raise your rates if it learns that you
were late on another card.
Account
closings: The Senate bill doesn’t address
it, but the House bill requires an issuer give you 30 days notice before it
closes your account.
Many of
the provisions in these bills are already addressed in the Fed’s credit card
regulations, which are slated to take effect in July 2010. Will this legislation
make it happen sooner? The House bill was scheduled to take effect 12 months
after passage, while the Senate bill planned for nine. We’ll keep you updated on
what the final law looks like–and when you might start benefiting from
it.