We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.
This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
Silly me! BT and Purchases

abby1234519
Posts: 1,961 Forumite
in Credit cards
I read a thread today that explained why you shouldn't spend on a Balance transfer card if the purchase offer wasn't the same length. Well unfortunately I read that after the event....
I have an MBNA card where I have transfered 2287.89 (inc fee) at 0% for 18 months
I stupidly put an emergency £59 on it. Standard rate is 23.9%
Bill hasn't been generated yet. I don't completely understand the whole thing about why not to spend on it as I thought I would have interest free on the balance transfer part and then just pay the £59 when the statement was generated. I now know that I'm silly to do that
How can I limit the damage? Should I pay the £59 off now before the statement is generated? How do I fix this/make it less worse
I have an MBNA card where I have transfered 2287.89 (inc fee) at 0% for 18 months
I stupidly put an emergency £59 on it. Standard rate is 23.9%
Bill hasn't been generated yet. I don't completely understand the whole thing about why not to spend on it as I thought I would have interest free on the balance transfer part and then just pay the £59 when the statement was generated. I now know that I'm silly to do that
How can I limit the damage? Should I pay the £59 off now before the statement is generated? How do I fix this/make it less worse
Money money money.
Debt
Dec 2016: [STRIKE]£25,158.71[/STRIKE] £21,999.99
#28 Pay off debt in 2017 £3803.55
Debt
Dec 2016: [STRIKE]£25,158.71[/STRIKE] £21,999.99
#28 Pay off debt in 2017 £3803.55
0
Comments
-
[STRIKE]Not a lot you can do until the statement is produced as there is a very good chance that any payment would go towards the last statement.[/STRIKE] Interest is not going to be much more than £1 (£59 over 1 year is £14.10 interest). [STRIKE]As soon as the statement is produced make a payment to cover the £59 and any interest.[/STRIKE]
See my post below.0 -
I haven't had a statement produced yet, the card has been open for less than a month.Does this affect it?Money money money.
Debt
Dec 2016: [STRIKE]£25,158.71[/STRIKE] £21,999.99
#28 Pay off debt in 2017 £3803.550 -
The only problem with spending on 0% BT card is that you don't get usual "up to ~55 days no interest on purchases" because the interest is waived only if you pay the statement balance in full.
So the interest gets charged on your £59 from day one until you pay this transaction off. The next payments will be allocated towards your purchases balance that isn't 0%. If you see this transaction online, pay it off now, and the interest will be negligibly small.0 -
Ok thank you. I've just got this horrible feeling that I'll pay interest on that £59 until the card is completely cleared!Money money money.
Debt
Dec 2016: [STRIKE]£25,158.71[/STRIKE] £21,999.99
#28 Pay off debt in 2017 £3803.550 -
Looking at para 4.1 of the T&Cs it seems they allocate payments to the higher interest bearing items even if they have not appeared on a statement so pay it off as soon as possible to minimise interest.0
-
abby1234519 wrote: »Ok thank you. I've just got this horrible feeling that I'll pay interest on that £59 until the card is completely cleared!0
-
Okay so I've paid it off. When statement is generated I will pay whatever interest has accrued AND a minimum payment to hopefully cover all eventualities. Silly me lesson learnedMoney money money.
Debt
Dec 2016: [STRIKE]£25,158.71[/STRIKE] £21,999.99
#28 Pay off debt in 2017 £3803.550 -
abby1234519 wrote: »I stupidly put an emergency £59 on it. Standard rate is 23.9%abby1234519 wrote: »Silly me lesson learned
Personally I don't think it was silly thing to do if it was an emergency. It's simply a service you took up when you needed it and will pay a small premium for.
I was very hungry last night and stupidly paid £4.95 for a Cornish pasty, despite having some perfectly good food at home (which I ate anyway when I returned). That £4.95 is considerably more than what you'll pay for getting your £59 when you needed it!!0 -
chattychappy wrote: »Personally I don't think it was silly thing to do if it was an emergency. It's simply a service you took up when you needed it and will pay a small premium for.
I was very hungry last night and stupidly paid £4.95 for a Cornish pasty, despite having some perfectly good food at home (which I ate anyway when I returned). That £4.95 is considerably more than what you'll pay for getting your £59 when you needed it!!
seems expensive for a pasty, are you from that London, where they call any old assorted veg in some pastry a cornish pasty.
bet there was even carrots and peas in it0 -
If this had not been a completely new card and statements had previously been produced, a payment made prior to the generation of the statement would have been applied to transactions which have already appeared on a statement and not the new transaction. Bear that in mind should you make a similar mistake in the future and do not pay off the purchase transaction until it has appeared on a statement.
In this case I think I would have waited for the statement just to be sure but you are probably ok.
The amount of interest that you will pay on this £59 is really quite small so not really anything to be over worried about.0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 351.7K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.4K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 454K Spending & Discounts
- 244.7K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.2K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.3K Life & Family
- 258.4K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16.2K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.6K Read-Only Boards