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Home > > TrueEarnings Business Card from Costco and American Express

TrueEarnings Business Card from Costco and American Express

-5% for buying gas
-3% for eating out
-2% for traveling
-1% for everywhere else, including Costco
No annual fee with your paid Costco Membership.

Earn cash back on every purchase

TrueEarnings® Business Card from Costco and American Express


No annual fee with your paid Costco Membership.
0% introductory APR on purchases for the first three months

Eligible Purchases earn a rebate:

  • 5% for buying gas.
  • 3% for dining out.
  • 2% for travel purchases from airline, lodging, car rental, cruise line, travel agency and tour operator merchants.
  • 1% on all other Eligible Purchases.
  • Rebates are awarded annually in the form of an in-store coupon.

Get a TrueEarnings Business Card and a Costco Membership in one!
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DID YOU KNOW?

Unsecured personal loans are personal loans designed to be undertaken without the need to secure the loans against collateral, such as a property or a car. This makes unsecured personal loans ideal for people who do not own their own home and for people who have no other type of collateral to secure personal loans against.

The extent of borrowing on unsecured personal loans is generally less than on secured personal loans, and the APR on unsecured loans is often higher than on secured personal loans. But, having said this, unsecured loans of up to £25,000 are possible from some personal loans companies. You can also obtain personal loans with repayment terms on unsecured borrowing of up to 10 years, and an APR of between 5.5% and 8% on unsecured loans.

Who qualifies for unsecured personal loans?
Unsecured personal loans have a wider reach than secured personal loans. Both tenants and homeowners can take out unsecured loans, as well young people who have no verifiable personal credit history. Additionally, unlike secured personal loans, unsecured loans are also open to people who have a poor credit record. If you have a record of defaulted mortgage payments, arrears on other loans payments or have CCJs filed on your personal credit record, making you ineligible for secured personal loans, then personal unsecured loans may be for you.

To successfully apply for personal unsecured loans, the applicant for the unsecured loan must have a regular source of income. Proof of income from the unsecured loans applicant is likely to be requested by the personal loans companies, and many loans companies will also carry out background checks on other loans, secured or unsecured, that the personal loans applicant holds now or has held in the past. Personal unsecured loans applicants who have been resident at the same personal address for more than three years and personal unsecured loans applicants who are married and have stable employment are those most likely to be successful in obtaining personal unsecured loans.

For homeowners, personal unsecured loans are ideal should the homeowner wish not to have personal loans officially secured against their property. The most successful applicants for unsecured loans in these cases are people who have equity in their property and no other unsecured loans. These factors above all else will help the homeowner applicant acquire unsecured loans, even if the homeowner has a bad personal credit history.

Loans companies offering unsecured borrowing in general do not limit what the funds from unsecured loans can be used for, so long as the person taking out the personal unsecured loans does not use the unsecured loans funds for illegal purposes. With unsecured loans, the sky really is the limit!

Free credit cards - what a concept! We're all enticed by the very word free. The more common term for free credit cards, however, is 0% (or zero percent) APR credit cards. APR stands for annual percentage rate. In other words, free credit cards can refer to those that charge you no interest on the purchases you make with them.

Years, and decades ago, the APR was standard no matter which card you chose, and which financial provider. The APR simply depended on the bank rates, which in turn were influenced by the federal reserve. 18 percent was then a fairly standard APR. This was clearly not a time when free credit cards abounded and, in fact, competition wasn't very frenetic, because the rate was the same no matter which card you chose.

Then, however, monoline banks came into being. These banks, unlike the traditional financial institution that accepted deposits and gave out loans, served simply as issuers of credit cards. These still didn't create free credit cards, but they did have a decreasing effect on credit card APR, because competition for credit card users started to become stiffer.

Nowadays, unlike the past decades, you're almost certain to find introductory promotional offers on just about every credit card. While they won't always qualify as one of the free credit cards, most will qualify as low interest first year credit cards. The most popular, of course, are the free credit cards - the ones that offer the zero percent APR at least for the first year.

What's so great about these free credit cards? The primary usefulness is not for the new credit card user (although free is certainly an enticement - and useful - for novice or long time user, young or old) but for those who already have accumulated a hefty amount of debt from the use of cards that don't qualify as free cards.

As an example, let's say that you owe $5000 on a credit card whose APR is twenty percent. You're going to have to pay $1000 just to keep up with the interest. If, however, your credit card is a member of the free credit cards family, your $1000 payment will actually bring the principal down to $4000. What a difference, then, these free credit cards can make!

Free credit cards can best help you get out of debt when you transfer the balance of another high-interest APR credit card to the account of the free credit card.

You might also benefit from free credit cards that charge no annual fee. Some of these do this as a promotional gimmick, eliminating the annual for the first year only, and then charging anywhere from $19 to $250 each year thereafter. Some instead charge an annual fee in subsequent years only if you don't use the card for the number of purchases the free credit cards companies designate as your minimum requirement.







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