I'm thinking that the answer will probably be no. But I wonder if you could use it to buy a money order and then pay it that way?to pay down a credit card?
I have $300 in AmEx gift cards and would like to use them to pay my CC bill this month.
Is that possible?
Thanks,
Dawn
I'm thinking that the answer will probably be no. But I wonder if you could use it to buy a money order and then pay it that way?
I don't know if you can, but here's what I do with those cards. If I want to use the money for something in particular and I can't use the actual card, I spend the card on groceries or something I would have bought anyway. Then I use my grocery money to buy something else. Last year, I had a $150 Visa gift card and I wanted that money for my vacation fund. I used the card for groceries, then put the $150 I would have used on groceries into my fund. So, if you can't pay the bill directly, maybe you can find another way to convert the card into cash.
That will probably be what I will do.
I did use one $100 GC at Walmart last week buying food and buying items for the boys for camp.
Now, since you have had one before....do you have to use it all at once or can I use $10 here and $10 there?
I ask because I got a $50 Visa gift card and noone told me it was a one time use thing.
Fortunately, I used it for about $45 the first shot, but when I went to get the remaining $5 off of it the woman behind the counter told me "it must be one of those one time use things."I was so mad. Nowhere on the card did it state that.
Dawn
It shouldn't have been a one time use if it was a basic Visa gift card. Now, if you used $45 on it, the next transaction would have required it to be run for exactly $5 (or less) or it would decline it. So, if your total was $10, you would have had to tell them there was only $5 and they would have had to do a split transaction.
Did you spend EXACTLY $45, or are you rounding up when you say that? Here's what I'm getting at:It shouldn't have been a one time use if it was a basic Visa gift card. Now, if you used $45 on it, the next transaction would have required it to be run for exactly $5 (or less) or it would decline it. So, if your total was $10, you would have had to tell them there was only $5 and they would have had to do a split transaction.
Did you spend EXACTLY $45, or are you rounding up when you say that? Here's what I'm getting at:
I had a Discover gift card last summer, and I had no idea that it was important that I know EXACTLY to the penny how much I'd spent . . . so let's say I had $50 and I spent $44.50. I have $5.50 left, but the store people can't know that . . . so if I say, "I have about $5 left", they're going to put in $5 and I'm going to lose my fifty cents (NOT okay in my book!). Yeah, YOU'D THINK they could run it through, take the last penny, and then say, "Your balance is ____", but the technology won't allow that.
The thing to do is to keep a Sharpie in your purse, and when you use the card WRITE ON IT -$44.50 or, if your brain works this way instead, $5.50 remaining.
Well, I don't want to pay a middle man in the process.
Dawn