Skip to main content

Career Campaign

  • Home
  • Categories
    • Advance Business Tips
    • Aircon Maintenance & Tips
    • Car Care & Rentals
    • Death & Biohazard Cleanup
    • Elderly Assisted & Home Care
    • Home Care & Maintenance
    • Home Loan Tips
    • Legal & Tax Solutions
    • Photography Guide
    • SEO & Marketing Guide
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

Credit card expiration date: What it does, and where to find it

February 5, 2021February 5, 2021 Kathryn Perkins Account Management, Advance Business Tips

In the era of lockdowns and social distancing, you’re probably relying most heavily on your credit card, as you shop online for many of your purchases.

But you might run into a snag and not be able to complete your transaction if you’re trying to use your card after its expiration date.

Here are some things to keep in mind if you want to keep those purchases coming all year long.

See related: How do credit cards work?

Wear and tear

Essential reads, delivered weekly

Subscribe to get the week’s most important news in your inbox every week.

By providing my email address, I agree to CreditCards.com’s Privacy Policy

Your credit cards journey is officially underway.

Keep an eye on your inbox—we’ll be sending over your first message soon.

While your credit card account itself doesn’t expire at a certain time, the piece of plastic associated with it does.

That’s because “magnetic stripes wear out, cards bend,” says Nessa Feddis, a senior vice president at the American Bankers Association.

Because of their propensity to show wear and tear, “issuers want to make sure to get working cards into customers’ hands,” says Ted Rossman, industry analyst for CreditCards.com.

Cards with magnetic stripes typically wear out faster, so they usually expire after three years, Rossman says.

EMV cards, which contain computer chips embedded in them, tend to show less wear than those with magnetic stripes, Rossman says. As a result, many issuers are extending the expiration date on those cards to five years.

Sending you a new card periodically also allows issuers to implement design upgrades and technology updates, according to a spokeswoman for Discover.

Credit cards for retailers such as Macy’s can be an exception and there may be no expiration date on such cards.

Safety and security

Expiration dates also serve as a security measure. If you’re making a purchase online or by phone, you’ll typically be asked to provide your account number, the three- or four-digit security code on the card and the credit card expiration date.

The expiration date helps to verify that your transaction is valid, Feddis says. “It’s another data point to match up.”

For the card issuer, putting an expiration on a credit card helps the company manage its credit card portfolio, Rossman says. About 20% to 30% of credit cards that are issued are never activated.

Having an expiration date on a card serves as a “mechanism for re-evaluating a customer’s standing and potentially clearing dormant cards off the books,” Rossman says.

According to the American Bankers Association, Americans held 373 million credit card accounts in the second quarter of 2020. But that was down from 374 million in the second quarter of 2019. It was the first time the number of accounts has fallen since 2012, no doubt tied to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Meanwhile, credit card debt fell by $74 billion from the third quarter of 2019 to the third quarter of 2020, according to the New York Federal Reserve. The drop was driven by the economic recession caused by the pandemic.

See related: Many Americans say they’ll spend less after the pandemic than before

Where to look

If you want to check your credit card’s expiration date, you’ll often find it embossed on the front of your card, under your account number and above your name.

It will be embossed with the two-digit month and two-digit year, such as 02/21.

In the past, the raised numbers were needed on the front of a credit card because merchants would use a machine to make an imprint of the numbers on a receipt, and customers would have to sign the receipt. Now those machines are few and far between.

Today you may have a newer chip credit card that has no raised numbers on the front, and the account number is printed on the back.

With those cards, you’ll also find the expiration date on the back of the card, below your account number.

The expiration date is listed as a month and year, so your card is valid through the last day of that month, the Discover spokeswoman says.

Your new card should be sent to you well in advance of the expiration date. Once the new card arrives, be sure to activate it using your computer or by calling in to the number listed on the sticker placed on your card. Sign your card and be sure to destroy your old one.

See related: What do the numbers on your credit card mean?

Recurring payments

If you use your credit card to make recurring payments, you’ll need to update your card information with the merchant to make sure your payments continue to go through, the Discover spokeswoman says.

However, many merchants subscribe to credit card issuers’ account updater services. If you get a credit card with a new expiration date, or you receive a card with a new account number, the service updates that information to the merchant, so your credit card payment will continue to be processed.

If your account information doesn’t automatically update, you may receive an email from the merchant, asking you to go to the company’s website and update your information.

Paying attention to your credit card expiration date can help keep your transactions on track throughout the year.

Source: creditcards.com

Account management COVID-19 Credit Credit Cards Financial Wize FinancialWize how to new york News Recession will

Post navigation

Did You Know that Amazon Has a Secret Luxury Site?
How to Kill Bathroom Mold: 8 Methods to Try

Home

About

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site Map

Categories

  • Account Management
  • Advance Business Tips
  • Aircon Maintenance & Tips
  • Apartment Hunting
  • Apartment Life
  • Auto
  • Auto Insurance
  • Auto Loans
  • Bank Accounts
  • Banking
  • Breaking News
  • Budgeting
  • Building Credit
  • Building Wealth
  • Car Care & Rentals
  • Car Insurance
  • Careers
  • Cash Back
  • Celebrity Homes
  • Checking & Savings Guide
  • Checking Account
  • College
  • Commercial Real Estate
  • Credit 101
  • Credit Card Guide
  • Credit Card News
  • Credit Cards
  • Credit Repair
  • Death & Biohazard Cleanup
  • Debt
  • DIY
  • Drink & Drive USA Guide
  • Early Career
  • Education
  • Elderly Assisted & Home Care
  • Estate Planning
  • Extra Income
  • Family Finance
  • Financial Advisor
  • Financial Clarity
  • Financial Freedom
  • Financial Planning
  • Financing A Home
  • Find An Apartment
  • Finishing Your Degree
  • First Time Home Buyers
  • Fix And Flip
  • Food Budgets
  • Frugal Living
  • Growing Wealth
  • Health Insurance
  • Home
  • Home Buying
  • Home Buying Tips
  • Home Care & Maintenance
  • Home Decor
  • Home Design
  • Home Improvement
  • Home Loan Tips
  • Home Loans
  • Home Loans Guide
  • Home Ownership
  • Home Repair
  • Identity Theft
  • Insurance
  • Investing
  • Legal & Tax Solutions
  • Life Insurance
  • Loans
  • Managing Debts
  • Minimalist LIfestyle
  • Money
  • Money Management
  • Mortgage
  • Mortgage News
  • Mortgage Rates
  • Mortgage Tips
  • Outdoor Yard Lighting Tips
  • Personal Finance
  • Personal Loans
  • Photography Guide
  • Quick Cash
  • Real Estate
  • Refinance
  • Retirement
  • Saving And Spending
  • SEO & Marketing Guide
  • Side Gigs
  • Small Business
  • Starting A Business
  • Starting A Family
  • Student Finances
  • Student Loans
  • Tips For Washing Cars
  • Travel
  • Unemployment
  • VA Loans
  • Work From Home

Recent Posts

  • What Is a Life Underwriter Training Council Fellow (LUTCF)?
  • How to Make a Side Income Running a Vending Machine Business
  • COVID-19 Scams
  • FHA vs. Conventional Loans: Which Is Better?
  • See Inside a Modern, Art-Filled Compound in Venice — with a Custom Outdoor Piece by French Artist Invader

Tags

Auto big Budget Budgeting Buy Buying Career College Credit Credit Cards credit report credit score Debt Family Finance finances Financial Goals FinancialWize Financial Wize Grow Home house how to Insurance Interest Rates invest Investing job Life Loans Main News Personal Personal Finance Planning Products Real Estate Retirement Saving savings School Shopping Spending states will
Career Campaign
Home | Contact | Site Map
sparkling Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress