Credit Card EFT

Spidey1

Member
Joined
Oct 4, 2011
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
Location
Joburg
Hi

My wife's car broke down over the weekend (aircon compressor) and will be fixed by today. Now first of all, I am a disciplined credit card user (always paying of my account at the end of the month). I want to pay the mechanic for fixing the car by credit card EFT (Discovery - FNB). I was wondering whether such a payment would attract immediate interest? Or would it be regarded as a normal credit card transaction (55 days interest free).

Any help or answers are appreciated!
 
Hi

My wife's car broke down over the weekend (aircon compressor) and will be fixed by today. Now first of all, I am a disciplined credit card user (always paying of my account at the end of the month). I want to pay the mechanic for fixing the car by credit card EFT (Discovery - FNB). I was wondering whether such a payment would attract immediate interest? Or would it be regarded as a normal credit card transaction (55 days interest free).

Any help or answers are appreciated!

AFAIK immediate interest, I drew money once(R800, didn't look at the card I was using) and hit interest :P
 
Cannot you EFT from a regular bank account? That way you will incur no interest.
 
It would attract immediate interest and incur a "withdrawel fee" of around R120. At least, ABSA/Standard Bank charges that fee for when you withdraw cash or do EFT payments with your credit card.

CC's are for swiping.
 
I don't recall FNB charging any exorbitant fee, but they will charge interest from the moment you transfer the money.
 
It would attract immediate interest and incur a "withdrawel fee" of around R120.

... don't think this is right.

An EFT doesn't attract a withdrawel fee of that amount. Probably closer to R3.00 or so
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X