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-   -   Recommended max CC applications a year? (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/milesbuzz/1123062-recommended-max-cc-applications-year.html)

tzoom84 Sep 3, 2010 5:12 pm

Recommended max CC applications a year?
 
Please let me know if this has been discussed in a prior thread or if this thread belongs in another forum.

I've seen here and in blogs that if done right, CC churning hardly dings one's credit score. I'm trying to gauge how many hard pulls (from a CC app) is too many in a given year. I understand this is very dependant on the person, but trying to get a ballpark idea (1,2,5,10,20?) For the sake of discussion, assume a 700+ credit score, 10+ years of credit history, low debt-to-income ratio.

Seeing so many deals lately, I'm enticed. But I want to manage the credit pulls and subsequently, my total credit available, if opening multiple cards.

atanac Sep 3, 2010 5:26 pm


Originally Posted by tzoom84 (Post 14599706)
Please let me know if this has been discussed in a prior thread or if this thread belongs in another forum.

I've seen here and in blogs that if done right, CC churning hardly dings one's credit score. I'm trying to gauge how many hard pulls (from a CC app) is too many in a given year. I understand this is very dependant on the person, but trying to get a ballpark idea (1,2,5,10,20?) For the sake of discussion, assume a 700+ credit score, 10+ years of credit history, low debt-to-income ratio.

Seeing so many deals lately, I'm enticed. But I want to manage the credit pulls and subsequently, my total credit available, if opening multiple cards.

Although this doesn't answer your question directly I've had great success with trading a card I
have for one I want and reaping the rewards. Say Chase has a Continental card you want and
you have another Chase card you are willing to give up. Fill out the ap for the Continental card,
if you get it then your work is done. If not call and speak with Chase and offer to trade in the
Chase card you don't want for the one you do. Has never failed for me, the benefits follow the
new card and it does minimize having too many open cards. One more thing, the card you are
willing to give up will need to have a zero balance so plan on that if you attempt this.

tassojunior Sep 3, 2010 6:11 pm

So Grateful Someone Brought This Up
 
For seasoned pros it may be common knowledge but for others it's no fun doing this trial-and-error when the error is your first refusal. The tip on Chase is especially helpful since they have most of the array of free or cheap FT cards.

I've done 2 AA's, 2 SPG's, and the United in the past 5 months and I've taken a break for fear I'll get a "too many apps" rejection. This in spite of Chase telling me when I got the United that my standing with them was impeccable and they encouraged me to get a "full compliment" of affinity cards. I've had 8 Chases at once in the past. I really covet the CO, the Marriott 50K, the Sapphire 25K, and a few others. But I also want a couple Barclays and a couple B of A's. So I'm probably sticking with the first advice I got here- average 1 card per month.

Too much like a kid in a candy store. So many cards , so little time.

tzoom84 Sep 3, 2010 6:57 pm

Wow thanks for the great tips. I signed up for the United but also had some hard pulls from a mortgage and some other things a few months back. I got denied the Citi/AA in the beginning of August because of too many inquiries so I wanted to make sure I wasn't off to too a bad start. (Also heard that this Citi card promo is a bit more selective).

So sounds like a rule of thumb is ~1 a month for someone with a good score? Anyone actually track their score over time to see how it varied as they churned?

hindukid Sep 3, 2010 8:06 pm

I pulled my equifax yesterday and only had a pull from Citi. I have recently gotten 3 chase cards and two amex cards but there was no inquiry shown. I am guessing that maybe since I already had cards with them they did not need to do a pull.

Or maybe they did not pull equifax. But if that's the case only 1/3 of your pulls will show.

Miami305 Sep 3, 2010 8:27 pm


Originally Posted by hindukid (Post 14600314)
I pulled my equifax yesterday and only had a pull from Citi. I have recently gotten 3 chase cards and two amex cards but there was no inquiry shown. I am guessing that maybe since I already had cards with them they did not need to do a pull.

Or maybe they did not pull equifax. But if that's the case only 1/3 of your pulls will show.

Check with another reporting agency... you know the drill. Different CCs use different companies.

no0neelse Sep 3, 2010 8:58 pm


Originally Posted by Miami305 (Post 14600380)
Check with another reporting agency... you know the drill. Different CCs use different companies.

Yup, good to keep track of all 3 so you know where you stand before applying.

tarheeljim Sep 4, 2010 5:41 am

more ideas on using CC's to best effect
 
There are several resources to learn from, and this is an area that has huge potential for one who is willing to take their time, learn and be methodical about it.

If you work it right and have decent credit scores, there is no reason why you can't accumulate HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF MILES A YEAR at minimal or no cost.

First, the Chicago DO in mid-Oct will have a seminar on using CC's to best effect. Can't wait!

Second, Rick Ingersoll's book, Frugal Travel Guy Handbook, devotes a chapter to how to do exactly what you are interested in. He also has a blog, Frugaltravelguy.com, which has many posts about this too.

Finally, fatwallet.com has general tips and posts on CC's and how to use them.

No, not a shill for Rick, just a traveler who has benefitted from all his work.

Jim

sdsearch Sep 4, 2010 10:52 am


Originally Posted by Miami305 (Post 14600380)
Check with another reporting agency... you know the drill. Different CCs use different companies.

Actually same CC can use different companies! :)

What I mean is, different people applying for the exact same CC can have pulls from different reporting companies, and the same person applying for the same CC at different times (just months apart!) can have pulls from different reporting companies. (At the very least, Citi is one that has had this much inconsistency.)

Golden Sparrow Sep 4, 2010 11:16 am

In the past 5 weeks, I applied for SPG, AA Amex, AA Visa, Chase Co, Chase UA, Chase Sapphire. I received 3 cards, 4 approvals, 1 decline, and 1 still pending. Erm ... what can I say, I really want to travel and I want to travel now now now ... ahem.

I didn't check my credit score before the start of all the cc applications but I did check on Aug 21 and then just today and mine actually INCREASED 5 points to 744 since last time. Something about low credit card utilization -- low percentage of usage compared to available credit. That could also be because I just paid the cc bills too though.

Edit: Thanks for all the warm welcomes if I didn't mention it beforehand on other threads.

no0neelse Sep 4, 2010 12:33 pm


Originally Posted by Golden Sparrow (Post 14602640)
In the past 5 weeks, I applied for SPG, AA Amex, AA Visa, Chase Co, Chase UA, Chase Sapphire. I received 3 cards, 4 approvals, 1 decline, and 1 still pending. Erm ... what can I say, I really want to travel and I want to travel now now now ... ahem.

I didn't check my credit score before the start of all the cc applications but I did check on Aug 21 and then just today and mine actually INCREASED 5 points to 744 since last time. Something about low credit card utilization -- low percentage of usage compared to available credit. That could also be because I just paid the cc bills too though.

Edit: Thanks for all the warm welcomes if I didn't mention it beforehand on other threads.

Since debt utilization ratio is part of your credit score, a significant increase to your total available credit would lower your debt utilization % and thus positively affect your score. My guess is your score was higher prior to you applying for those cards. The inquiries lowered it to what you saw on Aug 21 before the positive effect of the utilization ratio kicked in.

crazyMRer Sep 4, 2010 7:08 pm

10-30 applications per year should be doable for most people with the OP's profile.

Will it hurt the credit score? Yes

Will it make someone no longer credit worthy? No

If done well, those 10-30 applications per year should net $5K-$20K of additional anual income/rewards.

tassojunior Sep 5, 2010 1:35 am

I would love to be able to do 30 a year. I have a 775 and great credit.

HoKo Sep 5, 2010 10:53 am


Originally Posted by sdsearch (Post 14602540)
Actually same CC can use different companies! :)

What I mean is, different people applying for the exact same CC can have pulls from different reporting companies, and the same person applying for the same CC at different times (just months apart!) can have pulls from different reporting companies. (At the very least, Citi is one that has had this much inconsistency.)

This is certainly true, the variable that you didn't mention that has a significant impact is where the applicant is located. I would not be surprised at all to see a creditor pull a report from 3 different credit bureaus for 3 people applying for the same credit card if one of the applications was located in Cali, one in Kansas, and one in DC.

BUT, if all 3 were located in the same city/area I would be more surprised if the creditor did not use the same credit bureau.

newhousejim Sep 5, 2010 4:20 pm

Last year, when you could churn the citi AA, the rule of thumb was 6 inquiries within the last 6 months. So, I was running 1 app per month. If you didn't time it right, citi would turn you down for too many inquiries. Of course, this was Citi only.


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