Why are credit card limits so high?
Why are credit card limits so high?
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Discussion

Somewhatfoolish

Original Poster:

4,977 posts

210 months

Friday 11th August 2023
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My original post was going to include numbers but it read a bit like a humble brag so I won't go into specifics but broadly it seems to me that credit card limits are dementedly high for most people where I'm aware of the limits and the income. They seem a little high on an individual card level but when you combine all the cards together they go up to insane amounts. Why is this? I could personally, and so could many people I know, go and spend WAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY beyond our means or realistic hope of paying back without it being rational to seek a repayment plan.

Yet bizarrely my bank recently cut my (unused) overdraft limit by 50% to about 1% of my aggregate credit card limit lol.

Doofus

33,371 posts

197 months

Friday 11th August 2023
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I don't earn any money these days, having effectively (but not officially) retired.

My credit card limit is about 10% of the cash I have with that particular bank. I'm sure they'd increase it if I asked (I've never needed to), but my point is that not all limits are 'high'.

abzmike

11,478 posts

130 months

Friday 11th August 2023
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Credit card limits are high to encourage spending, Want a new telly for £1000, or a kitchen for £15,000 - crack on, flash the plastic. Oh, and that’ll be 28% APR.

Somewhatfoolish

Original Poster:

4,977 posts

210 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
Well that was my alternative theory, the banks have me down as a moron who will use the limits...

djc206

13,449 posts

149 months

Friday 11th August 2023
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It depends on the credit card company in my case. My own bank who know exactly what I earn and more importantly spend have given me a credit limit of around 1.5 months take home pay. My Amex has a limit 3 times higher despite having a ludicrous interest rate. If I maxed that out I’d be in quite the predicament for a very long time so I get your OP. I have a third card that I don’t use it’s just a backup when travelling abroad and that’s got a credit limit that seems to endlessly rise I can only assume in order to tempt me into using it. Between the three I could get myself in real trouble.

Glosphil

4,800 posts

258 months

Friday 11th August 2023
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I have 3 credit cards (long story).
Credit limits are:
1 - 6x net monthly income
2 - 3x
3 - 2x

My savings are almost 16x the total of the 3 limits so I would have no problem paying them off. However, I haven't paid any interest for at least 20 years as balances paid by DD every month.

3 card rarely used, 2 occassionslly & 1 at every possible chance (gives cash back).

Trustmeimadoctor

14,314 posts

179 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Currently have 3 but dropping to 2
Day to day card is BA amex all spending I can goes on that
When it's not accepted I use Halifax clarity and for foreign purchases

I haven't paid any interest in several years

My available credit is far in excess of what I could ever possibly need

Puzzles

3,302 posts

135 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I’m with Tesco and mine is pretty low, often I have to make additional payments mid month before the direct debit as I’ll hit the limit.

I asked them to increase and they refused. I’ve never missed a payment and it gets fully repaid every month.

Trustmeimadoctor

14,314 posts

179 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Anyone know what the max you can have is?

aterribleusername

461 posts

87 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I once had three cards when I was earning £12.5k a year, the limits were:

Card 1: £15k
Card 2: £10k
Card 3: £8.5k

That was insane and I cut then down to just the one which is all I have now. That still has a limit of £6k if I want it but I opt to keep the limit set at £2k. Back when they could raise the limits without asking you (you now have to approve limits raising) Barclaycard upped my limit to £24k which is bonkers as I was only earning £8k a year part-time then!

Edible Roadkill

2,198 posts

201 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I’ve got 6 credit cards.

Total limits around 100k

It’s handy for making large purchases fully protected on 0% terms, whilst remaining within the 25% or max credit utilisation which credit file companies want to see.

I can still even now get 0% terms over 24months with a 0 transaction fee, took a new offer a few months ago so…..why not!?

It doesn’t make sense to lower the limits while there’s a free to use line of credit available.

Aunty Pasty

786 posts

62 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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It's to encourage further spending.

Seems most peoples attitudes here to credit seem sensible but venturing into other areas of the internet and into the recent past you'll find that some people regard credit as effectively "free money" and regard the total amount of credit they can get as a measure of their financial worth as opposed to something sensible such as assets minus liabilities.

Crudeoink

1,289 posts

83 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I got a credit card after getting my first job out of university. I was only on about 25k at the time but was given a limit of 8k straight away, I remember thinking it was a bit nuts. It was 0% though so like any petrol head, I went and dropped it all on a new motorbike biglaugh

Kirkmoly

186 posts

42 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Doofus said:
I don't earn any money these days, having effectively (but not officially) retired.

My credit card limit is about 10% of the cash I have with that particular bank. I'm sure they'd increase it if I asked (I've never needed to), but my point is that not all limits are 'high'.
I am retired and have the problem with my credit limit being too low. It seems only regular pension / annuity or earned income counts and I have none of those so computer always says no to credit limit increase. Anything beyond normal weekly shop I have to use a debit card.

okgo

41,638 posts

222 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I just asked for larger limits just for flexibility. Interestingly my own bank have only offered me half of what Amex have. I have both cards which total about £60k but NatWest know a LOT more about me than Amex do and they’re pretty averse it seems.

rdjohn

7,027 posts

219 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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You could rewrite the OP to ask “Why are credit card companies, so profitable.?

OldSkoolRS

7,085 posts

203 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Apart from stupidly drawing cash out using my credit card and not my debit card (so I incurred a transaction charge, then immediately paid off the balance once I realised my mistake) I've never paid any interest or charges on either of 2 cards I hold with the same bank that I've had for maybe 25 years.

I kept one for work related purchases and the other for personal and have them set to be paid in full each month. Despite not using much credit and now in a similar situation to Doofus and I'm retired/living off savings/very small pension, my credit limit has slowly gone up. For the last financial year the limit on the pair is more than 2x what my income has been.

I just keep them ticking over and use them alternately once in a while (then paid off in full anyway), just in case I need credit and then I can give notice on savings. I don't know what my credit rating is as I've never checked it, so I might do that just out of interest. I wonder if they will just leave the limit where it is (slowly eroded by inflation) or actively reduce it? I only have £1 in the current account with that bank as I now use another that has better savings rates and pays interest on the current account. I just transfer money across ready for the CC bill if I use it. They've probably made plenty out of the cut from my CC transactions over the years, but I do wonder if they will keep letting have the account and associated credit cards. Like others have said though, perhaps they just hope we'll use this line of credit and get suckered into some stupidly high APR...

Sy1441

1,283 posts

184 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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I remember when I was a manager is Asda I had one of my team who had learning difficulties and had somehow managed to get himself 5 credit cards with around £30k of combined limits, was always scared someone would take advantage of him, never happened thankfully.

When I was younger utilised credit cards a fair bit and ended up with some limits that I would have had no chance of paying back if I'd maxed them, now at 41 I use my Amex for anything I can and settle the bill each month, they don't disclose your limit but do allow you to put in a value and they will tell you whether they will authorise it.

okgo

41,638 posts

222 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Some of the Amex cards are just like credit cards these days. Certainly the BA one I have allows you to leave debt on it if you want.

ChocolateFrog

34,954 posts

197 months

Saturday 12th August 2023
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Somewhatfoolish said:
Well that was my alternative theory, the banks have me down as a moron who will use the limits...
That's pretty much it isn't it.

It's convenient but if you don't clear it every month it's a great earner for the banks.

Good enough that they don't mind plenty of people defaulting.

As it happens I'm about to reduce mine down to £1000.

Anything more and I'll either get a loan or take our an 18 month interest free jobby.