Avoiding credit card surcharge
Avoiding credit card surcharge
Author
Discussion

Waspy1

Original Poster:

3,146 posts

193 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
I need a new garage roof (£1500)

I want to use my credit card to pay for it.

The roofer charges a 2% surcharge on credit cards.

How can I avoid this?

Stevenj214

4,941 posts

245 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Pay by Debit Card, Cheque or Cash. HTH

Waspy1

Original Poster:

3,146 posts

193 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Thanks for the reply, but I don't have the cash.

I have 3 credit cards with zero balance ontstanding, I'm just trying to figure out some way to pay without incurring this 2% extra.

PugwasHDJ80

7,620 posts

238 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Don't see how you can

he's passing on his credit card charge to you- otherwise it comes off his bottom line, and if he doesn't do many card transactions then he won't have costed these charges into his quote.

In this case, sounds fair that he would pass these charges on (car dealers tend to do the same thing!)

You could offer to pay half the charges in cash....

scotal

8,751 posts

296 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Waspy1 said:
£1500

2%
£30, errmmmmmmm "get over it"?

Waspy1

Original Poster:

3,146 posts

193 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
scotal said:
£30, errmmmmmmm "get over it"?
yeah, fair enough but it feels like throwing 30 quid away, oh well.

scotal

8,751 posts

296 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Waspy1 said:
yeah, fair enough but it feels like throwing 30 quid away, oh well.
Think of it as part of the cost of the roof. If the guy had quoted you £1530 all in, no credit card surchage, it wouldnt be bothering you.

Wings

5,895 posts

232 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Can you not transfer monies from 0% credit card to current account, then use debit card to pay for garage roof.

cs174

1,271 posts

237 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Wings said:
Can you not transfer monies from 0% credit card to current account, then use debit card to pay for garage roof.
That would be a cash advance on the credit card and will cost alot more than 30 quid.

Wings

5,895 posts

232 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
cs174 said:
That would be a cash advance on the credit card and will cost alot more than 30 quid.
Not so, one of the main Uk banks has a credit card where the transfer fee is only 1.5%.



wattsm666

730 posts

282 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
So 1.5% of £1,500 is £22.50 rather than £30.00......I don't think we are talking about amounts that will save the Greek economy.

northandy

3,521 posts

238 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
Pay for the work in cash, then use credit card for normal shopping up to £1500.


sinizter

3,348 posts

203 months

Thursday 13th October 2011
quotequote all
northandy said:
Pay for the work in cash, then use credit card for normal shopping up to £1500.
This.

Put your regular spending on your card, effectively transferring money to your account - It's slower than a straight transfer or spending the large amount on your card.

Or talk roofer into knocking £30.00 off.

Wings

5,895 posts

232 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
wattsm666 said:
So 1.5% of £1,500 is £22.50 rather than £30.00......I don't think we are talking about amounts that will save the Greek economy.
Absolutely correct, for me it is not about the amount, but the principle of the retailer/trader wanting to pass on these charges to their customers. In these times of difficult trading, as a trader/retailer 3% credit card charges, i could absorb, carry just to get a sale.



cs174

1,271 posts

237 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Wings said:
Not so, one of the main Uk banks has a credit card where the transfer fee is only 1.5%.
Isn't that transferring TO the credit card rather than from?

AndyT77

1,755 posts

179 months

Tuesday 25th October 2011
quotequote all
scotal said:
£30, errmmmmmmm "get over it"?
This.