I have a much more complicated financial life than I need to but I want to optimize the small advantages to make something big. This has required being vigilant about balances, transfers, and due dates. I recently had a negative experience with my primary credit union that prompted me to fire them and reexamine how I have things ordered.
This was home to my primary transactional account and changing things was going to be a pain so I wanted to it once and correctly. In my previous post I had shared how I had put the the cell phone and electric bills on auto-pay to credit cards. This eliminated two monthly payments leaving my checking account which both simplified things some and cut my expenses by about $2 per month through credit card rewards. $24 per year saved simply by changing the payment method! I had read elsewhere of the strategy of depositing all money into a savings account and transferring to checking only to cover expenses and decided to implement this. I had a little used Capital One checking account back from the ING Direct days and found that they also were among the higher savings account rates available without jumping through hoops.
I set my paycheck to deposit to the newly created savings account so it would earn interest from the day of deposit and created a timeline of my known due dates to see how much needed to be transferred to checking and when. I then went into all my biller's websites and configured auto-pay from the checking account. This arrangement will net me 0.10% on the checking balance and 1.00% on the savings account, I am forecasting this will increase my earnings by about $35 per year over the prior arrangement through increased interest and delaying payment to due dates. It will also reduce the time required to keep my financial house in order without sacrificing the use of multiple credit cards to maximize the rewards.
A journal of my random travel and points adventures as well as the journey through financial streamlining and automation. Maybe you'll even learn a few things along the way.
Showing posts with label automation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label automation. Show all posts
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Automate All The Things!
Labels:
automation,
banking,
CapitalOne,
credit cards,
credit union,
finance
Friday, July 24, 2020
Better Matters
Yesterday I shared that I had cancelled my Hilton Surpass Amex based on the uncertain future. I was on the fence about this for some time as there was plenty of potential value but a better card came along to sway me to cancelling it.
The Verizon Visa from Synchrony Bank. I am a Verizon customer, after jumping to several competitors I found that only the Verizon network worked for me. Synchrony released their new Verizon card at exactly the time I would have considered it so I now have it and it has quickly found a place in my wallet. Standard offer is $100 in bill credits over 24 months when Verizon bill is paid with this credit card or $4.17 per month. Not a great signup bonus but this is Synchrony and there is no minimum spend requirement. I signed up with an additional launch bonus, at this time that amount remains a mystery.
Breakdown of rewards:
4% of grocery and gas
3% on dining
2% on Verizon
1% everywhere else
This card really had two selling points to me. First 4% on groceries. I don't have a card that has a grocery category so getting this on a no fee card is a big win in my total rebates. The 3% on dining is nice but I have that with the Citi Costco, The Verizon card does allow for redemption each billing cycle rather than just an annual rebate each spring with Costco. The second attraction is the 2% on Verizon. This was one of two bills that I could not pay on a credit card without a penalty. Verizon offers a discount per line with direct ACH debit that far outweighs any credit card rewards. The branded Visa allows that discount to continue as well as earning a 2% rebate on the monthly bill with immediate turnaround on redemption so having the card effectively reduces cellular expenses by 2% ignoring the signup bonus credit. My Verizon bill is about 2% of my monthly spend so 2% of 2% does eventually add up.
The other bill I could not pay via credit card without penalty was my electric bill. I recently discovered that there was a way to do so via Arcadia Power (Referral Link). In deregulated states I believe they act as a electric broker, it regulated states they offer green wind electric for a slight upcharge or 50% wind for free for using their services. They make their money on these customers through the float on your electric bill but I'll take the credit card rewards over the 30 days interest. For this I have my Citi Double Cash registered so am getting 2% back on electric and cell service.
The Verizon Visa from Synchrony Bank. I am a Verizon customer, after jumping to several competitors I found that only the Verizon network worked for me. Synchrony released their new Verizon card at exactly the time I would have considered it so I now have it and it has quickly found a place in my wallet. Standard offer is $100 in bill credits over 24 months when Verizon bill is paid with this credit card or $4.17 per month. Not a great signup bonus but this is Synchrony and there is no minimum spend requirement. I signed up with an additional launch bonus, at this time that amount remains a mystery.
Breakdown of rewards:
4% of grocery and gas
3% on dining
2% on Verizon
1% everywhere else
This card really had two selling points to me. First 4% on groceries. I don't have a card that has a grocery category so getting this on a no fee card is a big win in my total rebates. The 3% on dining is nice but I have that with the Citi Costco, The Verizon card does allow for redemption each billing cycle rather than just an annual rebate each spring with Costco. The second attraction is the 2% on Verizon. This was one of two bills that I could not pay on a credit card without a penalty. Verizon offers a discount per line with direct ACH debit that far outweighs any credit card rewards. The branded Visa allows that discount to continue as well as earning a 2% rebate on the monthly bill with immediate turnaround on redemption so having the card effectively reduces cellular expenses by 2% ignoring the signup bonus credit. My Verizon bill is about 2% of my monthly spend so 2% of 2% does eventually add up.
The other bill I could not pay via credit card without penalty was my electric bill. I recently discovered that there was a way to do so via Arcadia Power (Referral Link). In deregulated states I believe they act as a electric broker, it regulated states they offer green wind electric for a slight upcharge or 50% wind for free for using their services. They make their money on these customers through the float on your electric bill but I'll take the credit card rewards over the 30 days interest. For this I have my Citi Double Cash registered so am getting 2% back on electric and cell service.
Labels:
Arcadia,
automation,
Citibank,
credit cards,
Verizon
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