| ▲ | xp84 12 hours ago | |||||||
Not to mention the grace period. Especially with high interest rates, it's another perk to have thousands of my dollars stay in the bank all month while my credit card bill piles up. This matters less when rates are super low. | ||||||||
| ▲ | pc86 11 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
One thing I didn't truly appreciate until my wife and I consolidated our spending and had children - having nearly every expense flow through a credit card puts total spending into perspective without having to look through bank statements or keep up a spreadsheet. Getting a $10k bill when you're expecting $8k (or a $30k bill when you're expecting $20k) can be a pretty jarring event and is a built-in monthly touch point to review budgeting and spending. It wouldn't be quite the same impact spread out over 5 cards paid out of multiple checking accounts with slightly different billing cycles. | ||||||||
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