Archive for April, 2008

The ESPN Visa card, issued by Washington Mutual, is currently offering a 0% APR on balance transfers and purchases for 6 months.  There are no fees on balance transfers initiated at the time of application.

The ESPN Visa is a sports affinity credit card that offers consumers a range of sports themed rewards.  Aside from offering no fee balance transfers, this card also offers new customers the following benefits:

  • 2,500 Bonus Points upon first card use within one year.
  • Rewards start at just 2,500 points.
  • No annual fee.
  • Earn 5 points for every $1 you spend on purchases from ESPN, including ESPN Shop, ESPN Zones, ESPN Sports Concierge Service, and more.
  • Earn 1 point for every $1 you spend on other purchases.
  • Earn tickets and VIP Access to Sporting Events, Sports Merchandise and Collectibles, Retail, Dining, and Travel Rewards through the ESPN Total Access Rewards Program†.
  • Use the FREE ESPN Sports Concierge Service to buy hard-to-get tickets, arrange travel to sporting events, or create your own ultimate fan experience.

You can learn more about the ESPN Visa by viewing the online application or compare other balance transfer credit cards in the credit card offers section of Smart Balance Transfers.

The days of 0% APR no fee balance transfers are over-for now.  This week, Citi stopped offering no fee balance transfers with its Citi Professional Cash card.  This was the last no fee balance transfer offer from a major bank.  While Bank of America currently offers a 1.9% APR on no fee balance transfers with its Make a Wish card, this APR is only for 6 months.  Paying a balance transfer fee and getting a 0% APR for 1 year provides much more savings. Now that the market currently lacks a no fee balance transfer credit card, consumers should focus on credit cards that charge low balance transfer fees. 

What is a low fee balance transfer?  In a nutshell, a low fee balance transfer is one with a limit on maximum fees.  Currently, all major credit cards are charging a 3% balance transfer fee per transaction.  However, some credit cards have no limit on balance transfer fees, while others cap fees at $75.

Finding a low fee balance transfer credit card can provide a great deal of savings.  For example, if you transfer a $5000 balance to a credit card that has no limit on balance transfer fees, you would spend $150 in fees.  The same balance transfer, if done with a low fee balance transfer card, would only cost $75.

We have compiled a complete list of balance transfer credit cards here for easy comparison.

Even though balance transfer fees are now unavoidable, the amount of money you can save with a 0% APR balance transfer is still significant.  For example, if you have a $5000 balance on a credit card with a 12% interest rate, you can save over $620 this year on interest.  If you factor in the balance transfer fee, you still save over $550 on interest.

To find out how much you can save with a 0% APR balance transfer, check out our balance transfer calculator before applying for a new credit card online.

Credit card companies love to hide details in the fine print.  However, all companies are required to fully and clearly disclose all rate and fee information to applicants.

When you’re getting ready to apply for a balance transfer card, there is one very important disclosure to look for:  the balance transfer fee.  While different credit cards disclose this information in different ways, you will generally find information on balance transfer fees in the “Other Fees” section of the terms and conditions.

Once you’ve located this section, carefully review the specifics.  In total, there are three different possible fee structures.  The best, and most difficult to find, is a statement that there are no balance transfer fees. 

The most common balance transfer fee disclosure generally states, “ BALANCE TRANSFER TRANSACTION FEE: 3.0% for each balance transfer made under this offer, with a minimum of $10 and a maximum of $75.”

Notice that a maximum fee is clearly stated.  The third possible fee disclosure will look very similar to the one cited above.  However, there will be no notice of a maximum fee.  If there is no stated maximum fee, you will be charged a full 3% of the balance you transfer.  This means that a $10,000 balance transfer would cost $300, as opposed to $75.

If possible, we recommend finding a credit card that charges no balance transfer fees.  We list every available no fee balance transfer offer on our website.  If you cannot get approved for a no fee balance transfer card, we strongly encourage you to avoid a credit card that does not cap the maximum fee at $75.

In a move that has become all too common over the past year, Bank of America recently stopped offering 0% APR no fee balance transfers with its Platinum Plus Visa.  To make matters worse, they have put no cap on balance transfer fees.  This is a seismic shift, as what was once the best balance transfer credit card on the market is now one of the worst.

Here’s the problem.  Most credit cards charge a 3% balance transfer fee with a maximum fee of $75.  Thus, if you transferred a large balance of $10,000, your balance transfer fee would be $75.  With the new fee structure of the Bank of America Platinum Plus, the fee on a $10,000 balance transfer would be $300, or 4 times the maximum fee most other issuers would charge.

The elimination of this no fee balance transfer credit card from the market has left only one current offer available to consumers looking to save money on balance transfer fees.  And, based on the way credit card companies have been behaving, it is only a matter of time before the final no fee balance transfer credit card is gone.

What’s the best balance transfer option now?

As I write this, Citi still offers one no fee balance transfer credit card (see the no fee balance transfers section of SmartBalanceTransfers to learn more).  If, however, you need to transfer a balance from a Citi card, there are no current fee free offers.  If you find yourself in this position, or cannot get approved for the Citi no fee credit card, Discover and Chase still offer 0% APR balance transfers with $75 fee limits.  Over the course of a year, these credit cards will provide hundreds, if not thousands in savings.  Sure, you’ve got to pay a little more in upfront fees, but most reasonable people would much rather pay 3% in fees than 15% in compounding interest.

Hopefully, this decidely consumer un-friendly trend will end soon.  However, with the credit crunch still looming over everyone’s head, it looks like deals will get worse before they get better.