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New Credit Card Laws: What You Need To Know About Rates And Fees

First Posted: 4/24/10 Updated: 5/25/11

New Credit Card Rules

NEW YORK - (BY CANDICE CHOI AND EILEEN AJ CONNELLY, AP)

The new credit card law is finally here. Starting Monday, banks will need to abide by new regulations on terms and disclosures. The idea behind the landmark law was to prevent banks from using practices that often dug borrowers deeper into debt.

A look at how the credit card law affects key aspects of your account.

INTEREST RATES

THEN: Banks could raise the interest rate on an account at any time, including the rate on an existing balances, even if you weren't late on payments.

NOW: The rate cannot be raised in the first year after an account is opened unless an introductory rate has come to an end. After that, cardholders must be notified 45 days in advance of any rate change.

For existing balances, rates can't be raised unless the account is at least 60 days past due. If payments are made on time for six consecutive months, the original rate must be restored.

There's still no cap on rates.

DISCLOSURES

THEN: The fine print on cardholder agreements was often difficult to understand. Rates, fees and penalties for other services such as cash advances, for example, could be hard to find. The impact of the interest rate on paying down a balance was hard to compute.

NOW: Cardholders will see how many months it will take to pay off a balance if only minimum payments are made. Statements will also indicate how much needs to be paid each month to pay off a balance within three years.

SERVICE FEES

THEN: Banks could charge as much as they wanted. They could assess annual fees, activation fees and other fees. This was mostly a problem for subprime cards marketed to those with poor credit scores. One popular card, for example, the Premier Bankcard, charged $256 in first-year fees for a $250 credit line.

NOW: Service fees, such as activation and annual fees, will be capped at 25 percent of the credit limit during the first year of use. After that, there is no cap.

GRACE PERIODS

THEN: Some card companies sent out statements not long before payments were due, and sometimes shifted payment due dates from month to month, meaning that payments would not always have enough time to arrive and get processed before being deemed late. As a result, some cardholders ended up getting charged interest or late fees even when they thought they were sending in payments on time.

NOW: The law requires that due dates remain consistent. Statements must be sent out 21 days before the payment due date, and finance charges and fees cannot be applied before that period is up. In practice, about half of card issuers have extended grace periods to as long as 25 days.

OVER-THE-LIMIT FEES

THEN: Banks set credit limits, then routinely allowed charges to exceed those limits. When that happened, though, the customer was charged an over-the-limit fee as high as $39. These fees were often triggered by interest charges or late-payment fees that pushed a balance over the credit limit. What's more, multiple over-the-limit fees could get charged in a single billing cycle if the balance was paid down and another charge pushed the balance back over the limit.

NOW: The cardholder must specifically agree to permit transactions that exceed the credit limit. Only then can over-the-limit fees be charged. But the fees can't be triggered by other fees or interest charges. Only one over-the-limit fee may be imposed during a billing cycle. No over-the-limit fees may be charged unless the cardholder has specifically agreed to permit transactions exceeding their authorized credit limit. These fees can no longer be triggered by other fees or interest charges imposed by the card issuer, and only one such fee may be imposed during a billing cycle.

In practice, several of the largest card companies have dropped these fees. Some banks are using pop-up boxes on their Web sites or other methods to obtain consumer authorization.

UNIVERSAL DEFAULT

THEN: If you made a late payment on one credit card or loan, or even late payments for obligations like utility bills, that could trigger interest rate hikes on other credit card accounts.

NOW: Card companies cannot raise interest rates on existing credit card balances. Interest rates can't rise during the first year an account is open, unless the original agreement spelled out a promotional rate for a limited time.

Consumers with older accounts must be informed of any interest rate increase on new charges at least 45 days in advance. They must also be given a chance to opt out of the hike by canceling the account and paying down the balance at the old interest rate. If an interest rate is increased, the card company must review the account once every six months to assess whether the rate should be dropped.

STUDENTS

THEN: Students arriving on college campuses often confronted a gantlet of credit card marketers handing out T-shirts, pizza and other gifts in exchange for filling out card applications. Credit cards were frequently handed out without checking the applicant's income sources. In 2008, 84 percent of undergraduates had at least one credit card. Average balances topped $3,100.

NOW: Credit cards may no longer be issued to anyone under age 21, unless the applicant has a co-signer, or can show independent means to repay the debt. Colleges must disclose any marketing deals they make with credit card companies. Banks are not allowed to hand out gifts on or near campuses or at college-related events.

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NEW YORK - (BY CANDICE CHOI AND EILEEN AJ CONNELLY, AP) The new credit card law is finally here. Starting Monday, banks will need to abide by new regulations on terms and disclosures. The idea beh...
NEW YORK - (BY CANDICE CHOI AND EILEEN AJ CONNELLY, AP) The new credit card law is finally here. Starting Monday, banks will need to abide by new regulations on terms and disclosures. The idea beh...
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11:33 AM on 03/22/2010
Citibank is still charging 15.00 to pay your bill by phone. Everytime you do, not just to set it up.
I thought this was going to be stopped by the CCR act. Who is going to enforce the law if they keep doing business as usual?
02:20 PM on 02/26/2010
CHASE just raised my rates on a credit card for no reason at all. As soon as that credit card is paid off, I will NEVER do business with Chase again. Do they not realize that a short time gain is going to be a long time loss? We need new legislatio­n to take care of this problem!
10:09 AM on 02/24/2010
There are somethings that should be common sense. The credit card companies should recognize that greater regulation and less consumer trust will hurt their businesses­. They realize that they are probably too big to fail, however consumers are getting wiser than they were for the past 30 years. Choose to pay cash as often as possible. Use debit cards and prepaid credit cards. For details see:
http://sco­re1st.com/­PrepaidCre­ditCards.p­hp
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
09:31 PM on 02/23/2010
Titanic ... deck chairs ... rearranged­. Consumer and business credit in this country are broken, we're in Kondratief­f Winter, and the only solution is a Jubilee straight out of the book of Leviticus.

In Mexico in the mid-'90s Wall Street engineered a currency coup that tripled the debt owed by small businesses and family farms and also allowed for them to be massively ratejacked on top of it. Mexicans consequent­ly formed the "el Barzon" movement and pushed back Wall Street and deposed their ruling party of 60+ years. In this country YouTube phenom Ann Minch has already declared the debtors' revolt and begun going after them http://www­.revoltsta­rtsnow.com.

If you've been pushed under, you can read my book for free: http://www­.scribd.co­m/doc/2544­3175/Debt-­Hope-Down-­and-Dirty-­Survival-S­trategies-­Evaluation­-Version-C­omplete
10:48 AM on 02/23/2010
Let us call it what it is: USURY ! There used to be laws against it, until that greedy cash-hungr­y cabal bought the government and sold out the people. And don't forget to be wary not only of interest rates, but also those SERVICE FEES based upon percentage of your credit line. We are all royally screwed -- and, sadly, most people are unaware and/or powerless to get out of the trap. It is not only acquisitiv­e materialis­ts who have found themselves in a credit card bind, but also innocents with serious domestic emergencie­s, medical and otherwise.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
03:15 PM on 02/23/2010
The change in law had nothing to do with the removal of usury laws. Instead it had to do with interstate commerce: Previously­, the contract for loaning money was a local thing and generally, the law of the state in which the consumer resided applied. However, there was an assault against state's rights in which it was challenged that a bank in oue state could not make a loan to a consumer in another state, and once it was ruled that loans could be made across state boundaries­, banks got wind of the idea of including a clause in their contracts stating that the law that would govern the loan agreement was the home state of the corporatio­n - sounds innocuous enough - but this had the effect of letting banks side-step usury laws by incorporat­ing in states that had no such laws....

If we want usury law to apply once more, there are several ways, one of which is to get those states without to pass usury laws....
..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
09:37 PM on 02/23/2010
The Marquette decision allowed banks to migrate to the states with the most liberal usury laws. But local judges know that their states still have usury laws on the book and they don't have to give the creditors what they want ... if you get sued, don't default on the case, defend it. Invoke your state's usury law and invite the judge to rule in the face of the feds. Unless and until the creditor gets you in federal court (which in most cases they can't), state judges can deal with them however the state judges want to. I think there are going to be a lot more state judges reversing a lot of ratejackin­gs or even refusing to rule that debtors owe these out-of-sta­te banks anything at all.

Congress could enact a national usury law, or they could overturn Marquette legislativ­ely and allow states to enforce their own usury laws on out of state banks. There WILL be a movement in this country to see that those things happen, one way or another.
10:43 AM on 02/23/2010
Let us call it what it is : USURY
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RonK Michigan
Half of the people you know are below average
06:33 AM on 02/23/2010
I'm not sure what you are "grumbling­" about? The solution is to simply live within your means. Why do you need a credit card that carries a balance - and therefore is allowed to hit you with all those B.S. charges and high interest rates blessed by the great states of Delaware and South Dakota. Either use a debit card or get an AMEX card that you must pay off each month (of course, there is an annual $55.00 fee). The C.C. companies have already bypassed the "new" legislatio­n by coming up with a whole set of new fees to snag your cash. If you don't have the patience to save in order to purchase a large ticket item - you get what you deserve...­..
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
01:46 PM on 02/23/2010
It often isn't the "large ticket items" that wind up breaking people. It is instead the thousands of "small ticket items" such as "food for their families" that break people. It wouldn't be this way if wages hadn't remained stagnant despite rising productivi­ty for the last 40 years.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Fannin
03:34 AM on 02/23/2010
The new regulation­s are great. The question is why did the banks get almost a years notice. They had a year to raise rates on outstandin­g balances, screw students etc. OH, I KNOW THE ANSWER, THEY WANT TO LOOK GOOD, BUT THEY ARE STILL IN THE BANKS POCKET. Never get the idea government works for people it works for government­. Throw the bums out.
12:31 AM on 02/23/2010
Thank God I don't need these bozos, and am glad they are being whipped on the butt. It was about time someone stopped their greed and their reaping-of­f the less blessed.
08:15 PM on 02/22/2010
Thanks a lot, Barney Frank. . I'm so happy we have you looking out for our best interests (pardon the pun). . however, since all the banks raised their rates to usury-leve­ls last fall in anticipati­on of this "legislati­on," I think it's just a little late to be closing that barn door. . .
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
01:47 PM on 02/23/2010
My cards did not raise their interest rates. I don't know about yours...

Where is the pun? There was no pun to be pardoned.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:06 PM on 02/22/2010
I paid mine off...10 minutes ago. Heard new rules and whatever.
08:03 PM on 02/22/2010
Finally, a very good piece of legislatio­n to protect consumers. This is what I call
fair and balanced.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AnswerToJob
07:48 PM on 02/22/2010
Friends don't let Friends use Chase Bank.
10:57 PM on 02/22/2010
I agree. Today, they raised our rate to the "default" rate and we have not paid late one time. They are basing this on a "review of your credit report, wherein it was reported that you were 1 time 30 days past due on one of your accounts." It wasn't even their card. I'm taking money out of retirement or savings to pay them off and will never use them again! Today, my neighborho­od was buzzing because of the multitude of outrageous hikes and/or lowered credit limits that we received today from the "too big to fail" banks. Thus far, 4 of my friends received these letters, too, with none of them having a late payment as a reason for the default. UNBELIEVAB­LE!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Molli Moriah
07:03 PM on 02/22/2010
I'm so sick and tired to hear about credit scores. Don't worry about credit scores, if you don't have the cash don't buy it. Save your money to buy anything you will be fine. Screw the credit card companies. They are all crooks. CASH and CARRY like my mom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galong
Sacrifice, the future has its price.
08:12 PM on 02/22/2010
Me too, Linda! I gave up credit cards over 15 years ago. It's a little inconvenie­nt sometimes, but there's always a better way.

I use overseas banks too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pstfleur
Corporate Student
06:53 PM on 02/22/2010
I just read my credit card statement. It said If I continue to pay the minimum..I­t will take 15 years to pay off LOL.. OH HEEEEEEEEL­LLLL NOOOOO