Recently Chase said they were going to upgrade my Chase Freedom card to a Chase Visa Signature card. It says I would keep the rewards program but get access to some new things. One of them is that there is no overlimit fee because there is no preset limit.
That is okay with me, and the other benefits of the new card, while not real important to me, could be pretty beneficial. Mainly the fact that I'd keep the current rewards but get some new things...
Sure, sign me up!
Except, I've read that due to not having a preset, standard credit limit, that the way your total revolving credit line may get reported such that it drops because of the apparent loss of a credit line. For me, that would be a lot because I only have one other card and it has a low limit. Instead of a current average revolving utilization of 5 to 10%, I'd be at 30 to 60% if the Chase credit line was not taken into account at all.
So, is this true of this new card, and would it be a big blow to my credit? I can opt out of this new card if I want to.
Seems like it could be a way for Chase to have less liability on their records, like a more creative way instead of just slashing credit lines in half like companies have been doing.
That is okay with me, and the other benefits of the new card, while not real important to me, could be pretty beneficial. Mainly the fact that I'd keep the current rewards but get some new things...
Sure, sign me up!
Except, I've read that due to not having a preset, standard credit limit, that the way your total revolving credit line may get reported such that it drops because of the apparent loss of a credit line. For me, that would be a lot because I only have one other card and it has a low limit. Instead of a current average revolving utilization of 5 to 10%, I'd be at 30 to 60% if the Chase credit line was not taken into account at all.
So, is this true of this new card, and would it be a big blow to my credit? I can opt out of this new card if I want to.
Seems like it could be a way for Chase to have less liability on their records, like a more creative way instead of just slashing credit lines in half like companies have been doing.
