Search Smart Spending:

Chase raises minimum payments on credit cards

Posted Jun 25 2009, 11:45 AM by Karen Datko
Rating:

This post comes from Mark Huffman at partner site ConsumerAffairs.com.

Thousands of Chase credit card customers have gotten some bad news this month. The bank has informed them that the minimum monthly payment on their accounts is being raised from 2% of the balance to 5%.

That might not sound like a huge increase, but for many who are carrying large balances and are on a tight budget, it's a severe and unexpected blow.

Kay, of Pottsville, Pa., said she contacted Chase and was told the change in policy was related to the poor economy. "I was told I could possibly renegotiate a lesser monthly payment but my interest would go from 3.9% to 21.99%," she told ConsumerAffairs.com. "My monthly payment from my four accounts will go from $961 a month to $2,394 a month. Needless to say, I will not be able to make these payments and will end up defaulting on my accounts and probably claim bankruptcy."

The change in minimum payment has little to do with how long customers have been Chase cardholders or their credit ratings. An analysis of complaints to ConsumerAffairs.com in the last few days shows that many customers do seem to have one thing in common. They all mention that they took advantage of a previous promotion and signed up for a Chase credit card with the promise of a low fixed rate for an extended period of time.

"In the past year I took advantage of balance-transfer offers with their life-of-the-loan low interest rate offers of 5.99% and 6.99%," Wendy, of Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif., told ConsumerAffairs.com. "I basically used the card as debt consolidation this year ..., wanting to close some other accounts and just use the Chase card to pay this amount down. I am horrified at the new 5% minimum. This will increase my payment by about $475 a month."

Dana of Dacula, Ga., also took advantage of the promotion and transferred money to a Chase account at 4.9%. Her minimum monthly payment will go from 2% to 5% in August.

"This could put me in default since it would cause my payment to more than double each month," she said. "I do not want to use the card. I just want to pay it with the terms I agreed to when the card was issued."

With new credit card rules on the way, thanks to changes by regulators and Congress, lenders are preparing for a new consumer-lending environment. By increasing its minimum monthly payment for customers with low fixed interest rates, Chase recovers that low-interest money faster, and can loan it out again at much higher rates.

The new credit card rules will prevent lenders from arbitrarily raising interest rates, but do not address the issue of minimum monthly payments. In fact, regulators in the past have encouraged lenders to increase the minimum payments, so that consumers pay down their balances faster.

But a number of consumers who thought they were doing the smart thing -- transferring large balances to cards with locked-in low rates, are finding themselves in a trap. The increased minimum payment is now unaffordable. The price of keeping their payment the same is to give up that promised low rate, so that more of their monthly payment goes to interest each month, not paying down the principal.

Related reading at ConsumerAffairs.com:

Most consumers lack confidence in food safety, survey says

Feds offer DTV reception advice

Wireless carriers agree to $1.5 million cramming settlement

Comments

 

I called Chase and spoke with a very RUDE  David Porter,  supposedly a supervisor about the increase.  He stated there is no choice and no negotiating this.  I told him this is not possible to make this kind of increase and I have NEVER been late and have always paid MORE than minimum payment.   Basically he said too bad.   I would NEVER recommend Chase to anyone ever!!    Obama and congress mandating new regulations for credit cards effective NEXT YEAR   is like telling someone they are having a drug test and then giving them 6 months notice.  ABUSE ABUSE ABUSE !!   Is this FAIR..NO.  I cannot imagine the hardship  of all taxpaying Americans  who have had there wages cut, benefits taken  or reduced, and work days reduced then having CHASE to deal with!!!!!   DID You Read that WEDNESDAYs are the days with highest rate of suicides!!!?  Thanks Chase. !!!!!!  

Most all the cards are doing it. Our government allowed it when they passed all the new laws but gave the banks enough time to stick it to everyone. Here are the facts; 75 to 90 percent of all politicians and corporations are corrupt and greedy beyond imagination. Here are a few options.

1) Vote them all out.

2) Try to get a better rate with them or someone else. ( Odds are it will not work and if it does only briefly)  

3) Quit paying and settle down the road. But you trash your credit.

4) Sell all you can that you own - cut your spending to the bone and pay them.

5) If you are invested in the market in any form stocks,mutual funds... the market looks sideways for years to come. It may be smarter to cash out unless there are heavy fines...like 401k...I have heard you can take out the principal on Roths...without penalties...AND PAY THEM OFF. YOU DO SEVERAL THINGS HERE. Get out or get closer to out of debt. Odds are many of you funds are in banking, oi, insurance....all the ones who stuck it to you for no reason. So you are taking your money and shorting there cash flow... yet paying them so you do not get stuck with interest...60 Car companies did the same thing to us...so do not buy a new car...

7) if you must invest Invest in land and hope local government does not steal it from you.

8) Every time you put gas in your car think about how you are feeding the band of thieves. so go several places when you go out.....

9) 80% of this country is in the same boat and 80% of them did nothing wrong. At the end of the day each of us must decide what is best for us and our family. But 805 of 80% of Americans is enough to make a change

10) ATTEND THE NEXT TEA PARTY.. And good luck to all as we all need luck and action in the masses to change what they all have done to us all the last 20+  years. And if you are under 55 and healthy thank God you may have time to recover. But if you are over 60 you got hoses real bad...And if you are under 25 you will pay much much more than anyone for this mess....

ps I also saw this on a page

To whom it may concern,

I would like to opt out of the interest rate increase outlined in your letter dated 12/1/2007. Please take this letter as my final notification that I do not wish to pay the higher interest rate, and will continue making payments at my existing interest rate.

This letter has been delivered via certified mail with a return receipt. My account information is as follows:

Name: Your Name

Address: Your Address

Account Number: ( don't put your credit card number here, use the account number on the bills )

Thank you for your prompt action.

Sincerely,

Your name

Be sure to use certified mail and a return receipt so that you can prove when the letter was sent.

cc President of USA, local senators, congress,governor, all legal agencies...but just sent to them email or regular mail to keep cost down

60 car companies should be 6) car companies

But 805 of 80% of Americans is enough to make a change

SHOULD Say 80% of 80% of Americans is enough to make a change

All I can say is I am on the path to getting rid of ALL my credit cards and shutting them down for good. If consumers would do this, rather than try to "negotiate" lower rates and payments, the banks might wake up and see that their policies are not going to be accepted by consumers. This is the only way to fight back. Pay those things off entirely - as fast as you can. You can actually call and close the account even before the balance is paid off. This will send a signal to them - we don't need your credit. Check out Dave Ramsey's world. Credit scores aren't essential - PAY CASH. If you can't pay cash - you don't need it.

Cash is ruining me.  Paying best I can but now I send $50.00 a week to keep up with the monthly payment.  They sent a letter just pay the $705.00 payment and the calls will stop.  29.99% on 7800.00.  I keep trying but my son-in-law just got killed on a 4 wheeler so sad, stressed and more bills.  No way am I going to be able to handle this and keep paying.  Called customer service in May when I knew I was going to hve trouble in June due to death in the family and the bills coming in for that sad event  and the calm as can be man from Chase said sell your car pay your Chase Card.  I said how will I get to work. He answered ride a bus or get a bike.  52 year old grandma here and work is 23 miles away.  Also when Ike came and destroyed our coast I called all my CC to see if I needed a 30 day grace could I have one.  Most agreed.  Chase said no and then sent a letter stating they forgot to charge me for a JUNE late payment fee?? and they would put it on the Oct. bill.  Thats was my hurricane relief from Chase. Didn't need to miss any payments on my Sears or Verizon  but  they were really going to help if I had needed it.  CHASE =LOAN SHARK

CHASE IS RUINING ME! CHASE = LOAN SHARK  WE NEED A HERO!

This is absurd.How is this going to help a poor economy when it makes it impossible for the hard working -bill paying--Americans when the minimum required payment is now impossible to pay? Now more people are going to be unable to pay the required payment--so they can then increase your interest rate etc. Most people do have living expenses and now days even those are costly even on a modest budget. I feel like when I made the debt the agreement was one thing and then all of a sudden Chase decided to change the agreement--this should be illegal and I feel like the Chase folks making these changes should be punished.Sad to see our country in this mode.

I am one of the 'good' customers referenced by many posters.  Wife and I both have excellent credit ratings (Still getting 0% offers from other cards if you can believe that!) We've never missed a payment, yadda yadda yadda.  I've had this account for 15 years and have literally paid tens of thousands of dollars in interest to them.  (Not complaining, mind you, the interest rates were competitive and I needed the funds for various business activites.)  I borrowed ~$35,000 at 4.99% a year ago 'for the life of the balance.'  At that time, I reviewed the rates and terms via telephone with a Chase rep.  I SPECIFICALLY inqiured about the minimum monthly payment and was assured that it would remain at 2% 'for the life of the balance.'  Now they are changing it because they can 'change any term at any time for any reason.'  (Their words, not mine.)  I'm more fortunate than some here, as this isn't going to break me.  Although I have considered telling them to $#@$# off and just file bankruptcy.  As another poster mentioned - in a world where you can't borrow money, what good is a credit rating?  Needless to say, calmer heads have prevailed, and I do owe the money afterall.  Strategy at this point is to pay the minimum for the time being while I complain long and loud in every place possible.  In the end, if nothing changes, I will probably pay the card off and then charge a pack of gum once a month.  If I can come up with a plan to cost them even more money, I will do that.  Thus far, I have filed complaints with the OCC, the FTC, the Delaware BBB, my state's Attorney General, my Senator and my Congressman.  If anyone has any other places they have found that might be worth complaining too, please let me know.  I think the only unique angle I have versus other posters is that I was actually promised a 2% monthly minimum.  I still have my notes from that conversation, but unfortunately not the name of the person I talked to.

I just paid off my Chase and canceled it.  They are scum of the earth.  No surprise that they would do something like this.

"Throughout this crisis, we have remained committed to doing our part to help bring stability to the communities in which we operate and to the financial system overall," Dimon said.

Dimon is with Chase Bank. So my question is how is Chase helping the community by increasing the majority of it's customers minimum payment by 150% during these very difficult economic time? Really? Unbelievable.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):