Kenny Golde is the author of “The Do-It-Yourself Bailout: How I Reduced My Credit Card Debt from $212,000 to $30,000 in Six Months and Saved Over $100,000.”
http://www.SettleYourCreditCards.com
Even wondered what the difference was between the Finance Charge and The Annual Percentage Rate (APR) as stated on your credit card statement?
The following is from the Federal Reserve website (http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/consumerhdbk/cost.htm#apr), a good explanation of the difference.
The Finance Charge and Annual Percentage Rate
Credit costs vary. By remembering two terms–the finance charge and the annual percentage rate (APR)–you can compare credit prices from different sources. Under Truth in Lending, the creditor must tell you–in writing and before you sign any agreement–what these terms will be.
The finance charge is the total dollar amount you pay to use credit. It includes interest costs and other costs, such as service charges and some credit-related insurance premiums.
Example:
Suppose you borrow $100 for one year, and the interest is $10. If there is a service charge of $1, the finance charge will be $11.
The annual percentage rate is the percentage cost (or relative cost) of credit on a yearly basis, which is your key to comparing costs, regardless of the amount of credit or how long you have to repay it.
Example:
Again, suppose you borrow $100 for one year and pay a finance charge of $10. If you can keep the entire $100 for the whole year and then repay $110 at year’s end, you are paying an APR of 10 percent. But if you repay the $100 and finance charge (a total of $110) in twelve equal monthly installments, you don’t really get to use $100 for the whole year. In fact, you get to use less and less of that $100 each month. In this case, the $10 finance charge amounts to an APR of 18 percent.
All creditors–banks, stores, car dealers, credit card companies, finance companies–must state the cost of their credit in terms of the finance charge and the APR. Federal law does not set interest rates or other credit charges. But it does require their disclosure so that you can compare credit costs. The law says these two pieces of information must be shown to you before you use a credit card.
Be wary as a credit consumer. Don’t only shop for rates but read the fine print, make sure you know how long those introductory rates last, and under what conditions they can terminate. You could even try calling a bank or credit card company when you are applying and ask for better terms than the offer you received in the mail contains. It’s all business and everything is negotiable.


