New? The credit card industry is decades old.
I suppose you're referring to BNPL; but OP is using Amazon Visa that's issued by Chase N.A.
This thread is a dozen pages of OP ignoring advice that he's solicited, over and over. Dude doesn't care, so why should we?
Yes I was referring to BNPL schemes which, also are not new but have exploded in popularity due to Klarna and Afterpay.
The running joke is people financing their Instacart and Doordash orders with equal monthly payments.
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My wife and I do that sometimes on big money purchases. We bought our Sleep Number bed recently on a zero interest credit deal through them. We have the money to pay it all off so we’re just making payments in big chunks to pay it off before I go into the hospital in November for my final chemo treatment and stem cell transplant. That way I don’t need to worry about making a payment while I am in the hospital as it is in my name. This is the only credit card debt we have.
There's certainly a lot of value-add ways for financially stable and literate people to use credit cards to their advantage:
- Cashback / rewards
- 0% Promo APR on new Purchases
- Extended Warranties and Consumer Protection
- Fraud and Identity Theft Protection
- Sign-up bonuses
...to name a few. But any nuance in this conversation is going to be lost on Gizmo. His takeaway is probably going to be "credit card good!" and get himself even deeper in a hole.
It's worth pointing out that, were he a Amazon Prime member (like any rational user of that card would be) - he'd be missing out on cashback in exchange for the BNPL financing.
The card provides 5% cashback on all Amazon purchases and I've found that if you are flexible on delivery date they'll often offer 6% for choosing a slower date. So as an example if you're thinking of a 6 month finance purchase, forgoing the cashback in favor of the payment plan is essentially as bad as of a financial decision as utilizing a 10-12% APR.
I'm pretty diligent about maximizing credit card rewards, and even will periodically do the "credit card churn" game to rack up notable sign-up bonuses. These rewards provide thousands of dollars of tax-free cashback per year for me so it's worth the amount of effort to juggle the cards, and these days there are ways to automate.
I also take advantage of 0% intro APRs occasionally to finance large purchases, but the difference between me and Gizmo is I have the payoff amount or more sitting in a High Yield Savings Account or similar earning interest so there is never any risk of non-payment.
There's a reason credit card companies are profitable and extend all these offers and it's not because of people like us
EDIT: All that being said, as usual Gizmo I hope you enjoy your new equipment but
PLEASE STOP DIGGING YOURSELF INTO A DEEPER HOLE FINANCIALLY. I would recommend calling and ask Chase to lock your card or reduce your credit line / available balance before you are tempted to purchase more.