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Efficient way to earn points buying a used car?
Person-to-person transaction, no dealership.
Things that occurred to me were Square, prepaid cards, etc. I think the person would like a traditional check; is there any way I can do a vanilla bean kind of deal to charge and cash out/deposit the price and then write a check from my account? Any suggestions? TYIA |
Originally Posted by Frinkiac7
(Post 19681497)
Person-to-person transaction, no dealership.
Things that occurred to me were Square, prepaid cards, etc. I think the person would like a traditional check; is there any way I can do a vanilla bean kind of deal to charge and cash out/deposit the price and then write a check from my account? Any suggestions? TYIA |
Gotta love BB haha.
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BB?
Bluebird? |
Originally Posted by Stoughton
(Post 19681499)
Load to BB, have BB send them a check
If anyone can give me a quick step-by-step for this method, I'd really appreciate it. Thanks! |
Buy a ton of vanilla reloads, load to bb, bb sends check to seller... Drive away
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I've never accepted a check for a used car, and I've never heard of anyone other than a dealer who does.
If you want a step by step for loading cards, there's a clear explanation at Million Mile Secrets, but in my experience as a car owner for way too many decades...don't expect a private individual to accept check for a used car. Maybe it's a regional thing but there's no way I'd take a piece of scribbled on paper in exchange for a car. If the guy has check, hey, I have the car, we can go to the bank right there and he can pull out the cash. You know? It's too much money to risk being scammed. Maybe if you're buying the car from a relative, this would work, but otherwise...I'm not seeing it. |
Originally Posted by peachfront
(Post 19682621)
I've never accepted a check for a used car, and I've never heard of anyone who does.
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Originally Posted by peachfront
(Post 19682621)
I've never accepted a check for a used car, and I've never heard of anyone other than a dealer who does.
If you want a step by step for loading cards, there's a clear explanation at Million Mile Secrets, but in my experience as a car owner for way too many decades...don't expect a private individual to accept check for a used car. Maybe it's a regional thing but there's no way I'd take a piece of scribbled on paper in exchange for a car. If the guy has check, hey, I have the car, we can go to the bank right there and he can pull out the cash. You know? It's too much money to risk being scammed. Maybe if you're buying the car from a relative, this would work, but otherwise...I'm not seeing it. It's a family member, so we can stop speculating. |
Originally Posted by Frinkiac7
(Post 19682699)
It's a family member, so we can stop speculating.
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+1
Originally Posted by erik123
(Post 19682728)
Those are the worst!:)
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Originally Posted by Frinkiac7
(Post 19681497)
I think the person would like a traditional check
Used car sellers almost always want something like a cashier's check (the kind you can only get from a bank teller, in person, and which costs a few bucks) or cash, meaning something that can't possibly bounce.
Originally Posted by Frinkiac7
(Post 19682699)
It's a family member
Oh, in that case, maybe Paypal or one of the equivalent services? There might be a more straightforward way to use a miles/points earning credit card with an online money transfer than with a physical check. |
Originally Posted by erik123
(Post 19682728)
Those are the worst!:)
Another option might be to ask the family member if they have any big ticket purchases coming up from a vendor that accepts cc which you can pay for... Cheers |
Well, our poster is WRITING the check, but yeah, as a general rule, Of COURSE "those are the worst." I no longer take checks from friends and family members for a very simple reason. There are no consequences when they bounce the check, so it's inevitable that some of them do bounce the check. What, you're going to call the sheriff on a friend/family member? No, you just end up being ripped off.
It also just doesn't make any sense. It's a friend or family member. They know where you are, and you know where they are. If they had the cash, they can go to the bank at any time at their convenience and then get the cash to you. You can even meet for lunch and do it. If they only had the cash. But they don't! That's why they're trying to give you a scribbled on piece of paper in the first place. I personally wouldn't write a check to a friend or family member. I give them cash if they sell me an item. To me, no amount of miles is worth making someone close to me "wonder" what the hustle is. Besides, the friend or family member is probably already giving me a crazy discount or the full background behind what I'm buying. I need to screw around with gift cards and games too? Don't think so.
Originally Posted by erik123
(Post 19682728)
Those are the worst!:)
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There has been considerable cashier's check fraud over the past decade so, no, I never advise this and haven't accepted these for years. It's a friend/family member. If you have the cash, go to the bank with the friend/family member. Get the cash. They must be going to meet at the DMV anyway to change the titles and plates on the car. Forget trying to hit up the family member for miles as well as for the car, which you are probably already getting cheaper than the random off the street buyer...
Originally Posted by sdsearch
(Post 19684454)
In general:
Used car sellers almost always want something like a cashier's check (the kind you can only get from a bank teller, in person, and which costs a few bucks) or cash, meaning something that can't possibly bounce. (You should have explained that form the beginning!) Oh, in that case, maybe Paypal or one of the equivalent services? There might be a more straightforward way to use a miles/points earning credit card with an online money transfer than with a physical check. |
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