wow that sucks, where do you live again?
How much damage has it done to the car? Surely you can get it resprayed for less than $15k?
How much damage has it done to the car? Surely you can get it resprayed for less than $15k?
that reminds me of what happened at my job when hurricane sandy hit. about 20 brand new cars were flooded when the local river overflowed. they had to total all of them.Dilbert_X wrote:
Someone at work was saying he heard a complete shipment of 100 brand new Subarus sitting at a dealer has been wrecked.
Maybe the dimples will make them go faster - who knows.
get a credit monitoring app like credit karma. Also, set up bill pay reminders._j5689_ wrote:
Made a purchase a few months ago on my 2nd Capital One card at McDonald's and I forgot that Capital One only allows you to do automatic bill payment on one card(which wasn't that card) so the balance sat there unpaid for two months until I got a credit report change notification in my e-mail just now. Turns out that late and unpaid balance took 80 points off my credit score. Fuckers
I had to write out a check to pay a bill for the first time ever in my life a few months ago. Who doesn't have a website?!?Cybargs wrote:
do you guys still pay bills by check and cash?
cos everything is pree much direct debit here.
Oh yeah, my rent was a monthly check, forgot about that.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
I write a check for rent on my apartment. Everything else is direct pay. However, some credit cards charge you for setting up automatic bill pay. Fuck that.
Usually the minimum on credit cards and the entire bill for things like your cell phone. It's better to set then up through your bank rather than on the bill side because you remove the chance of overdrafting.SuperJail Warden wrote:
How does automatic bill pay work? I never used it because I don't trust automated stuff with my credit score.
Does it pay a certain amount each month or does it pay off a total balance?
two ways to do it here in ausSuperJail Warden wrote:
How does automatic bill pay work? I never used it because I don't trust automated stuff with my credit score.
Does it pay a certain amount each month or does it pay off a total balance?
do you have to mail out or fax a direct debit form or can you sign up with e-mail or through your bank's online system?Cybargs wrote:
two ways to do it here in ausSuperJail Warden wrote:
How does automatic bill pay work? I never used it because I don't trust automated stuff with my credit score.
Does it pay a certain amount each month or does it pay off a total balance?
you set up your own periodic transfer, or you sign a 'direct debit form' allowing vendors to directly deduct money from your account (most common with non-rent).
generally you do it at the store when you get your phone plan or whatever.SuperJail Warden wrote:
do you have to mail out or fax a direct debit form or can you sign up with e-mail or through your bank's online system?Cybargs wrote:
two ways to do it here in ausSuperJail Warden wrote:
How does automatic bill pay work? I never used it because I don't trust automated stuff with my credit score.
Does it pay a certain amount each month or does it pay off a total balance?
you set up your own periodic transfer, or you sign a 'direct debit form' allowing vendors to directly deduct money from your account (most common with non-rent).
Last edited by Cybargs (2016-11-16 20:28:35)
Every American bank does the same thing through their website or app and has for a very long time.Cybargs wrote:
generally you do it at the store when you get your phone plan or whatever.SuperJail Warden wrote:
do you have to mail out or fax a direct debit form or can you sign up with e-mail or through your bank's online system?Cybargs wrote:
two ways to do it here in aus
you set up your own periodic transfer, or you sign a 'direct debit form' allowing vendors to directly deduct money from your account (most common with non-rent).
you don't give the form to your bank, generally the company that's deducting money out of your account does that.
but a lot of service providers website allow you to enter your bank details to direct debit and it's really easy peasy.
we have this glorious thing in Australia called BPAY where you can set up your own automatic payment to a business (and it's all registered so you know who you're sending it to).
Naw i'm not talking about periodic transfers from account to account. BPAY is a very specific verified business banking method. Essentially our big 4 major banks got together and funded the whole thing.Jay wrote:
Every American bank does the same thing through their website or app and has for a very long time.Cybargs wrote:
generally you do it at the store when you get your phone plan or whatever.SuperJail Warden wrote:
do you have to mail out or fax a direct debit form or can you sign up with e-mail or through your bank's online system?
you don't give the form to your bank, generally the company that's deducting money out of your account does that.
but a lot of service providers website allow you to enter your bank details to direct debit and it's really easy peasy.
we have this glorious thing in Australia called BPAY where you can set up your own automatic payment to a business (and it's all registered so you know who you're sending it to).
I did think about switching to Capital One because they have a better savings account interest rate than most banks, but no I do actually have two credit cards from them. My Platinum card from them was my very first credit card that I just sort of used to build credit until I had better options, which eventually lead me to my primary card through them which is also my favorite one, the Quicksilver which gets you 1.5% back on everything. I've been thinking about just calling and asking them to maybe raise my credit limit on the Quicksilver to add in what's on my Platinum and then cancel the Platinum but it's also one of my oldest lines of credit which helps a lot when you've only got about 2 years average.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You have two capital one cards? A debit and credit I assume.
Even Credit Karma didn't tell me until after Capital One's own credit tracker told me first only once it was too late, I got no other alerts in the 2 months I've had that balance because they just forgive you for the first month and then charge you interest, then the 2nd month late fucks your credit up. It's kind of my fault for forgetting they don't let you set up auto-pay on more than one card but I hadn't used that one in almost a year or more because the other one actually has cashbackKEN-JENNINGS wrote:
get a credit monitoring app like credit karma. Also, set up bill pay reminders._j5689_ wrote:
Made a purchase a few months ago on my 2nd Capital One card at McDonald's and I forgot that Capital One only allows you to do automatic bill payment on one card(which wasn't that card) so the balance sat there unpaid for two months until I got a credit report change notification in my e-mail just now. Turns out that late and unpaid balance took 80 points off my credit score. Fuckers
Last edited by _j5689_ (2016-11-17 09:08:41)
our banks have something like that too. It's not popular and isn't very good and I think it's going through an overhaul right now.Cybargs wrote:
Naw i'm not talking about periodic transfers from account to account. BPAY is a very specific verified business banking method. Essentially our big 4 major banks got together and funded the whole thing.Jay wrote:
Every American bank does the same thing through their website or app and has for a very long time.Cybargs wrote:
generally you do it at the store when you get your phone plan or whatever.
you don't give the form to your bank, generally the company that's deducting money out of your account does that.
but a lot of service providers website allow you to enter your bank details to direct debit and it's really easy peasy.
we have this glorious thing in Australia called BPAY where you can set up your own automatic payment to a business (and it's all registered so you know who you're sending it to).
Last edited by Jay (2016-11-24 13:11:25)