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Can a 75 year old get a credit card?
wannaberich41
Posts: 527 Forumite
in Credit cards
Hi,
A family member had a joint credit card with her husband. The husband passed away 2 years ago and there is still £3000 on the card, think some of this was to pay for the funeral. It all got transferred into her name and she is trying to pay £200 off a month. However obviously some of that will be interest. My question is could she apply for another credit card and balance transfer so she doesn’t have the interest?
Didn’t know if her age would affect this?
Many thanks
A family member had a joint credit card with her husband. The husband passed away 2 years ago and there is still £3000 on the card, think some of this was to pay for the funeral. It all got transferred into her name and she is trying to pay £200 off a month. However obviously some of that will be interest. My question is could she apply for another credit card and balance transfer so she doesn’t have the interest?
Didn’t know if her age would affect this?
Many thanks
Things will get better day by day.
0
Comments
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She could try.
Whose name was the debt in? There are no joint cards in the UK. Sge may not need to settle it immediately, but from the estate.0 -
Who does she bank with? Is it possible to get a card with them?
Does she still work or is she retired with pension?I'm a Board Guide on the Credit Cards, Loans, Credit Files & Ratings boards. I'm a volunteer to help the boards run smoothly, and I can move and merge threads there. Any views are mine and not the official line of moneysavingexpert.com0 -
I don't think her age would be a problem, but the income requirements for any card she applies for - it is likely she will fail on affordability, particularly with £3000 debt already in her name. That said, use a few eligibility checkers to see what sort of deals she might be able to get - even a few months at 0% can take a significant chunk out of the monies owed0
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One thing that has not been noted - there is no such thing as a joint credit card.
If the card was in the name of the deceased then the family member should not have used the card to pay towards the funeral.0 -
wannaberich41 wrote: »Hi,
A family member had a joint credit card with her husband. The husband passed away 2 years ago and there is still £3000 on the card, think some of this was to pay for the funeral. It all got transferred into her name and she is trying to pay £200 off a month. However obviously some of that will be interest. My question is could she apply for another credit card and balance transfer so she doesn’t have the interest?
Didn’t know if her age would affect this?
Many thanks
Age doesn't matter. Reasonable number of people (wealthy people) in their 80s have credit cards.
The main point here is that whether they are profitable customers from the bank point of view.0 -
Didn't zx81 note it in the very first reply?jonesMUFCforever wrote: »One thing that has not been noted - there is no such thing as a joint credit card.0 -
jonesMUFCforever wrote: »One thing that has not been noted - there is no such thing as a joint credit card.
If the card was in the name of the deceased then the family member should not have used the card to pay towards the funeral.
Possibly a wee bit harsh with your last comment. Perhaps it was the only way?
The cardholder dying and the spouse (2nd cardholder) continuing to use the account isn’t that uncommon. From my experience those doing it aren’t really aware they are breaking t&cs, they’ve just been “part” of the account and keep it going. Then eventually they get it paid off, closed, or they pass away as well.0
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