Considering banks give their best customers a 3% interest rate, known as the prime rate, a credit card offering a 1.9% interest rate for nine months cash advances or outstanding balances transferred seems like a deal.
Just one thing. There’s a little footnote beside that 1.9% showing the rate actually jumps to almost 22% if you don’t pay it off in those nine months. That 22% is higher than most credit cards charge, even if the deal comes with no annual fee and a bunch of reward points.
There are literally hundreds of credit cards in Canada offering everything from teaser introduction offers to permanent low credit card rates to rich reward offers. Wading through them all is the real chore and requires attention to detail.
“It really depends on each person. If you travel a lot, a travel rewards card might be better. If you do most of your spending on cash and groceries you want the card that offers the most cash back on that,” said Kelvin Mangaroo, president of RateSupermarket.ca, which did a full study of the benefits of various cards available on its web site.
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