0% Interest

We opened a new credit card to purchase windows for our house. When we bought our house, there were 3 windows that had the gas seal broken and were dirty looking (not cloudy like I’d think would happen). Three sashes were really bad. One is on the side of the house in our bedroom, so we never see it. The other is the window over the garage, so front and center. We just keep the black curtain drawn so hopefully you can’t notice it, but it’s definitely noticeable if you look for it. Over the past 3 years, more windows have started to go. Some are getting to the point of being that bad, and some just have a holographic look to it that you can catch at certain angles. We also have a couple of windows that are freezing if you get near them. In my daughter’s room, I line the bottom of the curtains with stuffed animals to keep some of the cold out and let the animals absorb the cold.

Well, it was time to open a credit card then.

All of these companies are happy to open a line of credit for you. You can make payments on your windows (or really anything) for 5, 7, 10 years. Well, if you have good credit and don’t open credit cards often, you can look into giving yourself an interest free loan for 12-18 months.

We look for a credit card that offers at least 12 months of 0% interest and a reward of some sort. Usually the reward is related to an amount of cash back if you spend a certain amount in a certain period (e.g., $300 cash back if you spend $5,000 in the first 3 months).

We’ve done this several times. We opened a credit card to pay for IVF to have our first child (~$30k). We opened a credit card for the new carpet we put in our current house (~$10k). Now we opened a new one for windows ($11k). We pay about $500 (at least the minimum monthly payment owed) per month and always by the due date. If you are late on a payment, you forfeit the free interest and may even owe the interest that would have been owed on previous payments. Then as the end date of the 0% interest gets closer, we make a plan on where money will be transferred from savings to pay it before that date.

That’s one of the keys. We’re not taking this because we don’t have the money to pay it right now. We’re opening a credit card to allow our money to earn interest in a savings account of some sort for all that time. So instead of spending that money and losing that income, we delay the payment as long as possible to keep our money working for us. If you need something and don’t have the money to pay it right now, but you think you’ll be able to make payments on it as you earn income, then make that the variable. Don’t open a credit card if you haven’t ever and don’t plan to have that amount of money within the term. We also don’t open a new credit card while we’re paying on the previously opened credit card. In this instance, we paid off the balance of the carpet this past October. While it would have been nice to delay opening a new card a bit longer, the windows are really in rough shape, so we only had 2.5 months without a large credit balance to think about.