Follow this topicFollow this topic Knowledge » Credit cards

The best money transfer credit cards

Ed Bowsher
by Lovemoney Staff Ed Bowsher on 15 January 2013  |  Comments 9 comments

Are you paying painfully high interest on your overdraft? A money transfer credit card could cut your interest rate to zero.

The best money transfer credit cards

Overdrafts on current accounts can be painfully expensive.

Some accounts charges £5 a day for going into the red. And even with an authorised overdraft, many accounts charge as much as 19% in interest.

Money transfer

One way to get rid of your overdraft is to transfer money from your credit card to your current account. Many credit cards allow you to do this. Once you’ve transferred the money, you can use it to pay off your overdraft.

Unfortunately, credit card companies usually charge very high rates of interest on this sort of cash advance, higher than you would pay with most overdrafts.

However, there are a few cards that allow you to transfer money from your card at 0% interest. In other words, these cards allow you to do a 0% money transfer.

This is very similar to a 0% balance transfer. There are only two differences:

1. You’re transferring money from a card to a bank account, instead of transferring a debt from a card to another card.

2. The fee is often higher for a money transfer than for a balance transfer. Money transfer fees are usually around 4% whereas balance transfer fees are typically between 1.5 and 3%.

The top card

The most attractive money transfer card is the Fluid 24-month Visa Credit Card. Once you’ve taken out the card, you have 60 days to do a 0% money transfer. So if you have a £2,000 overdraft, you could transfer that sum from your card to your current account and you wouldn’t have to pay any interest for 24 months.

That’s a very long period for a 0% money transfer. You wouldn’t have been able to get any card with such a long 0% period three or four years ago.

The biggest downside is that you’ll have to pay a 4% fee when you make the transfer. Remember that’s an upfront fee that you pay in one go. You’ll also have to make the minimum repayment on the card each month. If you’re late with a payment, the 0% deal will end immediately.

The other crucial point is that if you haven’t paid off the resulting debt within the 24 months, you’ll then start paying 16.9% in interest – unless you can transfer the debt to a second 0% card.

That second card could be a normal balance transfer card, it doesn’t have to offer money transfers.

The rivals

The main downside for the Fluid card is that you can only get one if you have a good credit rating. That's a shame as I suspect that many of the folk who would benefit the most from a 0% money transfer will only have an average credit rating. On the plus side, the card offers 'Apply with Confidence', a service that checks if you're likely to be accepted before you actually apply for the card.

There are other cards to consider though.

The MBNA 23-month and 22-month Platinum Visas each offer 0% on money transfers, with a 4% handling fee. MBNA also offers the Everyday Visa, which offers 0% for 17 months on money transfers, with a 4% fee. 

If you're after a card that isn't backed by MBNA then Leeds BS offers a credit card with 12 months interest-free on money transfers, again with a 4% fee.

0% overdrafts

If I’d been writing this article a year ago, I would have recommended switching to a bank account with a 0% overdraft as an alternative. Sadly most of the 0% overdrafts have disappeared recently.

Read Five places where you can get an overdraft for free for a run through of your options.

Personal loan

Another option is to take out a personal loan. If you have a good credit rating, you could get a personal loan for as little as 5.1% a year. That’s going to cost you much less money than an overdraft at 19%.

If your credit rating isn’t perfect, you may be offered a loan at a higher rate – say, 10%. A loan at that rate is still worth going for. Read The cheapest personal loans for more.

More on credit cards:

The best new cashback credit cards

Top credit cards for poor credit

Get a personal loan for just 6%

Enjoyed this? Show it some love

Twitter
General

Comments (9)

  • JRAY100
    Love rating 50
    JRAY100 said

    Never a beggar nor borrower be...

    ...If you have any endowment policies check their loan value... the rate could be low e.g.: 2% above the bank rate [=2.5%]... then reduce your outgoings!... Review your lifestyle!

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Yorkstyke
    Love rating 89
    Yorkstyke said

    We're going back to the heady days of 2004/5/6/7 when Love Money or it's predecessors used to come up with an idea every week for borrowing on the cheap.

    Even though it may only have been in a modest way, it all contributed to household indebtedness which is now hiting people where it hurts, hence this is a somewhat irresponsible article.

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Yorkstyke
    Love rating 89
    Yorkstyke said

    Typo: hitting not hiting!

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • AndyP
    Love rating 24
    AndyP said

    I think the point of this article is more about how to avoid being charged for being in debt, making it easier to get out of debt. There's nothing in this article that encourages anyone to get an overdraft... only how to avoid paying ridiculous interest on it, if you have one (the obvious implication being that you can spend the money instead on clearing the debt, instead of managing it).

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • bohemianlady
    Love rating 7
    bohemianlady said

    You have hit the nail on the head AndyP. The article does say you need to pay off your debts and is trying to help you do so with the lowest interest rates possible.

    Yorkstyke is right irresponsible lending encouraged people who were not good with money. Using a 0% card would need someone to be very aware of their outgoings and organised about not missing payment. It might encourage good spending habits.

    BL

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • John Fitzsimons
    Love rating 30
    John Fitzsimons said

    Thank you AndyP, that is the exact point of the article

    John

    Editor

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • krustallos
    Love rating 39
    krustallos said

    Perhaps the cheapest way of getting rid of an overdraft is to get a 0% on new purchases card, use it for all your spending, and use your entire salary to pay off your overdraft.

    Unless your overdraft is colossal, within two or three months you should have shifted all your debt to the card, and have as much as 15 months with some providers to pay it off.

    The benefit here is that there is no fee to pay.

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • MikeGG1
    Love rating 878
    MikeGG1 said

    John

    The real problem with articles like this is that some people clear their overdrafts and say "Yippee, I can now spend my overdraft again!", but the original debt hasn't gone away.

    This should always be promoted as a means to help clearing debt rather than making debt more affordable as has happened in this article.

    The article keeps stressing 0% interest but the fee results in an equivalent interest rate of 5% if you clear the debt within the 0% period.

    Mike

    Report on 26 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • JennyD
    Love rating 0
    JennyD said

    Just querying the statement in the above article if "you’ve transferred a debt to an MBNA card in the past, then you’re not going to be able to do a 0% money transfer."

    Does this only apply to MBNA cards that are still open, or does it apply to cards which you have long since closed?

    Report on 17 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

Post a comment

Sign in or register to post a reply.

Our top deals

Provider & account name Credit rate (AER)
Based on £1
Overdraft
rate

Based on £1
Apply
now

Santander 123 Current Account

0.0% 0% plus £1.00 per day usage fee Apply

Barclays Bank Account

N/A Up to £200 – 0% interest pa (variable). Over £200 and up to £5,000 – 19.3% interest pa (variable) Apply

first direct 1st Account

N/A 0% Apply
W3C  Thank you for using CGWEBLIV2