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Deciding on a credit limit

DD265
Posts: 2,229 Forumite



in Credit cards
MBNA must think I'm about to pay off my card in full (they're not wrong; it'll be clear before November) as they've offered to increase my limit from £8,100 to £10,500.
I'm not sure I'm comfortable with such a high limit, but I have no intentions of using it, and infact was planning to drop the limit to £5k once it's paid off, to match my other card. Will then put food/fuel on them and pay off in full each month. Between our emergency fund and two £5k limit credit cards, I feel like we have all the bases covered.
I know we don't always get a say, but how do you decide what the right credit limit is for you? Where do you draw the line?
I'm not sure I'm comfortable with such a high limit, but I have no intentions of using it, and infact was planning to drop the limit to £5k once it's paid off, to match my other card. Will then put food/fuel on them and pay off in full each month. Between our emergency fund and two £5k limit credit cards, I feel like we have all the bases covered.
I know we don't always get a say, but how do you decide what the right credit limit is for you? Where do you draw the line?
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Comments
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For me its not about the limit but the balance, but if you feel more comfortable with a 5k limit then thats what you tell them you want.0
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MBNA must think I'm about to pay off my card in full (they're not wrong; it'll be clear before November) as they've offered to increase my limit from £8,100 to £10,500.
I'm not sure I'm comfortable with such a high limit, but I have no intentions of using it, and infact was planning to drop the limit to £5k once it's paid off, to match my other card. Will then put food/fuel on them and pay off in full each month. Between our emergency fund and two £5k limit credit cards, I feel like we have all the bases covered.
I know we don't always get a say, but how do you decide what the right credit limit is for you? Where do you draw the line?
If you don't want such a high limit, just decline the increase.0 -
I don't interfere with it at all, simply take what I get, as I'm concerned at unintended consequences, such as lenders assuming your credit-worthiness has dropped.0
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If you can trust your own spending habit, and manage your credit cards responsibly - does it matter if the limit is £5k or £50k - it could be £500k - and you'd still not abuse it - it's just a figure on a piece of paper for those that look after their accounts. I'd only ask to drop it if there was a risk I might go out on a spending spree.0
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