Getting points for a cash car purchase

Getting points for a cash car purchase

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Discussion

matt21

Original Poster:

4,290 posts

205 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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I’m about to buy a car for cash (from mAin dealer). Can I pay on credit car so I can get points, as it’s a large sum? If so any recommendations?

valiant

10,309 posts

161 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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Check with the dealer as many don’t like taking them for car purchases due to fees they incur

unident

6,702 posts

52 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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Highly unlikely they’ll let you put the whole thing on a credit card due to the fees they’ll incur.

You should always pay a small amount on a credit card though as it will give you a lot of legal rights for the whole purchase, even if you only pay for a small amount of the whole car via a credit card. I think the minimum is £100, bit could be a bit higher now. The total purchase needs to be less than £30000 though for full protection.

bristolbaron

4,840 posts

213 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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Going back ten years, but we used to take £500 deposit on a credit card, anything over that was +2%.

mikeiow

5,390 posts

131 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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Or go electric....
Hyundai Kona was all bought online....3 payments, all on credit card!

Whistle

1,408 posts

134 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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I used my Nationwide credit card to pay my wife’s car £14995.00

Gareth79

7,698 posts

247 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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unident said:
You should always pay a small amount on a credit card though as it will give you a lot of legal rights for the whole purchase, even if you only pay for a small amount of the whole car via a credit card. I think the minimum is £100, bit could be a bit higher now. The total purchase needs to be less than £30000 though for full protection.
There's no mimimum card transaction value to trigger the protection - if the total purchase is over the £100 then a £1 card payment will count.

bristolbaron said:
Going back ten years, but we used to take £500 deposit on a credit card, anything over that was +2%.
Fees can't be charged these days, but presumably a retailer could just say "no card payments over £500"

foiled

160 posts

71 months

Saturday 25th January 2020
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You could get a Curve Card, which acts as an intermediate debit card, which in turn is funded by your underlying credit card.

However, daily limit is £3750 and you lose the consumer protection of the credit card.