College
students and credit
If you have a son or daughter on their way to college
or currently enrolled, now is the time to start thinking about how
they will handle issues related to credit. A good credit standing
can have a positive impact on their job search when their college
years are over. Most students, however, don’t realize how
crucial this can be and oftentimes they cruise their way into a
bad credit spiral.
Most major companies run credit checks on potential job candidates
as a matter of course these days, so it is important that your offspring
pay careful attention to their credit
report if they hope to land that all-important first job. Two
things are worth paying attention: choosing the right credit card
and establishing credit though a “friendly” financial
institution.
Credit Union sign-up
Let’s look at the second item first. I would recommend you
enroll your son or daughter in a credit union as early in the game
as possible. Most credit unions allow membership to families of
credit union members while a few actually take “walk-ins.”
If you have a family member who works for federal, local or state
government, or who is a teacher, it is likely he or she belongs
to a credit union and can sign you up for membership. This is completely
different from co-signing and perfectly safe from a financial standpoint
for the family member.
Credit Unions are great places to start a savings account. They
also tend to offer free checking accounts and fairly gentle terms
for car loans. Credit Union auto loans are often three to five percent
below bank auto
loans and are usually available after 6 months of membership.
Rather than buy a car under your own name for a student going off
to college, apply for an auto that you co-sign at the Credit Union.
Even if you are the only one making the loan payments, at the end
of four years of college, your child will have developed a track
record that will show up as more than a blip on their credit
report score.
Secured Credit Cards
Your offspring may choose to establish credit with a secured credit
card or risk the commercial credit card offers that flood students’
mailboxes. There is a lot less risk involved with the former, which
limits the amount of credit available to the extent of your deposit
in a fixed account. After three to six months, their financial institution
will convert the secured credit card to a regular card provided
the payments have been made on time. Unfortunately, your son or
daughter may decide to take matters in their own hands and take
advantage of a hard-charging pre-approved offer.
Your only solution is to attempt damage control by educating
your student on reading the fine print in these juicy offers.
Most credit card offers trumpet zero percent offers for six to twelve
months. Even experienced adults have a hard time looking pastthe
zero in bold type and reading the print on the back of the offer.
And astoundingly, some of these back pages are printed in lighter
colored ink! The most important item on the back page will be what
the credit card company will do to your child if they fail to make
even one payment on time. Quite often, the zero percent rate will
jump to 5 or 10 percentage points above the prime rate, and may
thereafter rocket to 25 percent and beyond.
Incentive Program
If your college student has lost a job and is temporarily unable
to pay their credit card bill, be prepared to step in and help out.
And in order to ensure that you do not topple under the weight of
their monthly payment, set up an incentive program before they go
off to college. Draw up an agreement with your student that says
you will pay $100 per month for two years on their credit card bill
if they can prove they did not miss a payment through college. If
they missed a payment, drop your offer to $50.00 per month, and
if they missed two, your offer goes down to $50.00 per month for
one year. Withdraw your offer if they have obviously made a hash
of it throughout their college life.
Of course, it’s never to early to teach your children about
the vagaries of credit and it’s best they learn at home, under
supervision. Lessons learned before they go off to college may ensure
that they enter the working world with a solid credit
report and a good shot at saving themselves the burden of onerous
interest rates later on.
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