Better yet, just cut the damned thing up and NEVER use a credit card. If you cannot pay cash for it you cannot afford it. It is well and good that you say you will pay it off every month, but I can tell you from experience that it is hard to do.
Some people shouldn't use credit cards, but for those of us who are disciplined, there is money to be MADE by using credit cards. I will
profit well OVER $1,000 by using credit cards this year.
I use a credit card for almost everything I buy; gas, groceries, furniture, gifts, utilities, everything (excluding mortgage). If it can be put on a credit card, I put it on a card, including utilities. Probably 95% of my purchases are on a single credit card. I get maybe $40/month from the bank to pay tips, etc. I also don't buy anything unless I have the cash, and I live a pretty conservative lifestyle. I pay the card balance in full every month. American Express gave me a cashback bonus of just over 2% last year. I made several hundred dollars, and didn't pay a cent in fees or interest.
I also have a 0% interest card for 18 months. ~18 months ago I was getting married so I put my wife's ring, furniture for our new/first house, & some other one-time expenses on that card. Again, I had saved the cash for these items, but instead of giving it to someone else I put it in my Emmigrant Direct savings account, earning 5.05% (emmigrantdirect.com I'm surprised more people here don't talk about them). Anyway, that cash is just sitting there, earning over $100/month now, and I'll pay that credit card bill a few weeks before it starts accruing interest.
At that time I may try to find another card and repeat this process (no unneccessary spending, just the usual gas/groceries/utilities/etc.). Its worked great for me.
The car I'm currently driving is a '94 Z28 I bought when I was in college, it now has 257,000 miles on it. Who says American cars aren't reliable?
It has the original engine in it, and I've NEVER taken it to a mechanic...I do all my work myself. I like it so much I bought another one for $7k with only 30k miles, and will sell the old one soon. If I drive the "new" one for another $260k miles, I'll be doing good.
My wife's Oldsmobile clicked past 155k on our Christmas vacation, and we're currenty saving so we can pay cash for a newer used car for her.
I'm nowhere near rich, I'm an engineer (BSEE) & my wife is a teacher (which means she makes dirt here in Oklahoma) and we're both in our twenties (although I won't be soon
). Almost three years ago I bought my plane (paid cash, but its just a Pietenpol, it was cheap!), got married soon after that and six months later we bought our first house, and put 20% down and paid cash for all costs. Its a new house, but not big by today's standards (1,600SF).
People really throw away a lot of money in this country on cars & credit cards. I figure by living smart and not paying interest on those two items alone, we'll essentially increase our income over our lifetime by 10-20% compared to people who do the opposite.
As for the mortgage debate, before we bought our house I had plans to pay it off in five years and be mortgage free, but I've since decided that it would be better to place that money in a tax-free investment (like a Roth IRA or 401k). I believe I can pretty reliably make 8-10% with mutual funds (VFINX & others to diversify), and considering that I can avoid taxes through my 401k or IRA, it makes more sense to me to take that 10% gain tax free instead of paying the mortgage off to avoid paying the ~4% interest on the house (6% minus the ~2% deduction). We should come out 4-6% ahead annually by NOT paying off the mortgage & investing elsewhere.