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How to properly destroy a credit card

Posted May 12 2009, 08:02 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Jim Wang at partner blog Bargaineering.

Do you know why credit cards have an expiration date? In the beginning, it was because a credit card had a limited useful lifespan. After a few years, the magnetic stripe on the back would either get demagnetized or damaged so much that it was unreadable.

It wasn't until later that the expiration date was used as a security feature. For many years, you could continue to use expired credit cards because the stripe was fine and the expiration date wasn't used for verification.

So what are you to do with an expired card? You have to destroy it, of course. In our age of identity theft and fraud, only a fool would throw a credit card into the trash without cutting it up first. However, with the economy the way it is and the value of credit card numbers going up, it's important to properly destroy a credit card.

There are two crucial parts of a credit card -- information embossed on the front of the card and the information encoded in the magnetic stripe on the back of the card. Not surprisingly, both locations contain the same information, which is merely displayed differently to the typical "reader." When you want to destroy a card, it's important to destroy both sources of information, and this article will explain how.

Destruction

The best way to destroy a credit card, though ecologically unfriendly, is to burn it. Credit cards are made primarily of a plastic, polyvinyl chloride acetate, and burning the stuff isn't good for the environment or you. It also contains all manner of dyes, inks, holograms, metal, etc.

One could argue whether it's better for plastic to be burned into toxins in the air or dumped into the ground where the toxins can leach out. We'll just skip that debate.

If you aren't going to burn it, the next best solution is to disable the magnetic stripe and cut it up.

Disabling magnetic stripe. Disabling the magnetic stripe is fairly easy. Grab the strongest refrigerator magnet you have and rub it along the magnetic stripe. Chances are the magnet will destroy the data on the stripe. If you're concerned that the magnet isn't strong enough, let me assure you that cutting it up will probably be enough to mess it up anyway.

Disabling RFID/smart chips. If your credit card has an RFID or smart chip, you can destroy it by cutting it up or you can give it a good smash with a hammer beforehand. It needs to be intact to be operational so the act of cutting it up will destroy it.

Cutting/shredding the card. The next best way is to shred it. Unless your shredder has a special card shredder, I'd recommend against using a shredder because the teeth aren't designed for the more rigid plastic of a credit card. My card-destruction strategy is to cut each set of four numbers into six pieces. Here's a picture of a Visa Black Card with red lines indicating where I cut:

The set of cuts at the top of the card are designed to dice up the magnetic stripe. The cuts at the bottom of the card are designed to cut up the numbers into the six pieces I alluded to earlier. For the middle area, I take that piece afterward, flip it over, and cut it so my signature is illegible and the CVV number (the three-digit number) is destroyed.

Disposal. Now that you have a pile of plastic pieces, separate it into two or three piles and throw them in separate garbage bags. If you do that, it's extremely unlikely thieves will be able to put it back together again. Even if they were to get all the pieces, they're more likely to go after easier targets.

This may seem like a lot of work, but when you actually do it, you'll find it takes less than a minute. Recovering your identity and dealing with credit card fraud takes much longer.

Related reading at Bargaineering:

What is a good credit score?

Change your credit card due dates

How to get an Experian credit score

Comments

 

if you have a card that you no longe use that has an annual fee. you can request that the issuer NOT RENEW the account

I've already been doing the proper procedure: cut in 6+ pieces and dispose one piece at a time (ie. one piece a week -that's the garbage pickup schedule in our area). And BTW, any expired, colored and stain-inflicting sauces in my fridge (ketch, mustard, toppings) go out on top of my document shreddies bag - oh, not to forget: I split the shreds too, one bag this week, the other next week or later.

Exactly how much does an Author receive for article of this caliber? Think I should quit my day job and take up writing silly crap like this to inform whom? If you are not smart enough to know how to dispose of a card perhaps you really should not possess a card.

Any advise on how to hold my breath underwater?

Amazing how these little conveniences (credit cards, ATMs, cell phones, power windows) become so inconvenient when even the littlest thing goes wrong. I have two credit cards, and only because I occasionally need them to get along in the world and because maintaining them maintains my credit score (in case I need a loan). I am using the old 'cash and carry' method our folks used. If you don't have the money, you can't afford it...and probably really don't need it. Much simpler, and no debt/interest sucking the life out of me.

I use a confetti shredder then I put the pieces in my cereal.  I find that using Cocoa Puffs works the best for this because they don't cut the roof of your mouth any worse than the credit card pieces do.  Since they won't completely digest I put the waste in a paper bag and set it ablaze on someone's porch.  Oh how that makes me chuckle.  The stomping action of your neighbor combined with the heat of the flames forces the undigested pieces to deform beyound recognition and even if your neighbor is an identity thief, you can bet he won't go digging in there.

I use a Dremel with a sanding drum. I grind off all the raised numbers and gouge into any embossed ones.  This method leaves nothing but a bunch of indecipherable, tiny plastic specks.  It makes short work of the stripe, too.  The rest of the card I slice into pieces and put in the trash.

I cut mine up with a pair of virgin steel scissors in 256 pieces, then I take the pieces and soak them in a bowl of 30 year single malt. After that, I bake them at 350 degrees until golden brown. I then separate them into 25 different trash containers scattered throughout multiple counties. I then follow the containers to the landfill and spread the remains over a pile of seagull infested rubbish.

Wanna know what I do witm mine...?  I smash it with a hammer.  Rub it with 37 different magnents, sand off the magnetic stripe, take the dust from sanding and mix it in a glass pitcher with lemon oil and amonia.  Then I take the card itself and shred it in my Wal Mart shreder and then add those to the pitcher.  I take some gasoline and and styrafoam pellets and mix them up in the bathtub until the styrafoam starts to gel.  I then take the pitcher with the credit card, amonia and lemon oil and add it to the gasoline and gelled styrafoam.  I mix it together and let it sit for about 12 hours until it gets sticky like napalm.  Then I transport it in unmarked containers to various locations and dump it on the grass and light it on fire.  I then take the ashes of what is left and add them to a big drum of milk and stir it around for a while.  Once it starts to look like chocolate milk, put it in some milk jugs, slap a "Organic" lable on it along with a micro GPS chip and sell it to the local grocery stores.  Then I use the GPS chip to track who purchased them and systematically have them assassinated.  Thus making sure, no one can steal my card number.

I tape it to my mailbox in plain sight....oh wait, that's my ex-wife's credit card

just cut the card up into different pieces like the article said but merely cutting out two of the numbers on the card at a time is good enough. As you cut throw one piece in this week's garbage and save the next number for next time you get a new credit card garbage.

That way you are throwing away half the card at a time and saving half the card for the next random time someone sends you a new card. That way you never have the entire card in any given week's garbage.

If someone is keeping them for a few weeks or months and waiting for the other half to come out in your garbage in order to paste a card together you are still safe as the old card has expired and the expiration date will not work.

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