by Sally Herigstad December 17, 2010
Summary
A reader, whose elderly mom can’t get
credit in her own name, wonders if it’s OK to add mom as an authorized user on
her credit card
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Dear To Her Credit,
My elderly mother declared bankruptcy a few years ago and cannot get a credit card on her own now, so I would like to add her as an authorized user on my credit card account. I will be overseeing all of her finances and ensuring that the account is paid on time, so that’s not a problem. However, I need to know if adding her to my account will negatively impact my credit score solely due to the bankruptcy issue. — Gina
My elderly mother declared bankruptcy a few years ago and cannot get a credit card on her own now, so I would like to add her as an authorized user on my credit card account. I will be overseeing all of her finances and ensuring that the account is paid on time, so that’s not a problem. However, I need to know if adding her to my account will negatively impact my credit score solely due to the bankruptcy issue. — Gina
Dear Gina,
No, adding your mom as an authorized user to your card won’t immediately affect your score. Her past credit problems or her bankruptcy don’t show up on your credit history just because she’s an authorized user on your account.
No, adding your mom as an authorized user to your card won’t immediately affect your score. Her past credit problems or her bankruptcy don’t show up on your credit history just because she’s an authorized user on your account.
However, in the long
term, adding her to your account could have other unintended consequences. I
don’t recommend it.
The problem is
co-mingling her finances with yours. You can’t imagine how messy things can get
doing that!
First, if your mother
declared bankruptcy a few years ago, it’s possible managing money isn’t her
strong point. As she gets older, she may have a harder time understanding
financial limitations and remembering things. If she has your card, she could
go on a spending binge. She’ll have all the spending power, and you’ll have all
the responsibility for the credit card bill.
If you’re using her
income to pay your credit card bill, even though it’s for her expenses, your
brothers or sisters may look askance at that. “Not in our family,” you think?
Don’t count on it. Keep your finances simple and separate if you want to keep
the family peace.
Tax issues are
another problem. If you take care of your mother to such a degree
that you may qualify to take a dependency exemption for her on your tax
return, you’ll need to be able to show what expenses of hers you paid for. If
it’s all mixed up on a single credit card
with your expenses, that’s going to be difficult.
Further, if your
mother passes away when you have a balance due to purchases she has made, you
won’t be able to directly use her money to pay it off. You’ll have to wait
until her estate is settled and hope for the best. In the meantime, you’re
carrying a balance on your card, steadily racking up interest expense.
A better idea may be
for you to help your mother get a secured card
or a debit card. With both of
these options, she cannot spend more than she has. And even with a recent
bankruptcy, she can get them on her own so you don’t need to co-mingle funds
with her.
If she doesn’t have
enough money to make it on her own and you can help, find ways to do it without
co-mingling funds or exposing yourself to unnecessary risk. You can buy things
for her, for example, when you take her shopping. Or you can pay some of her
bills directly, or give her a gift card to the drugstore. Adult children
sometimes pay ahead for a month’s worth of meals at the senior center, or hire
a cleaning service for their parents.
Of course, you can
always slip her some cash. True, you’ll never know where she spent it, like you
will if she uses your credit card and you get the bill. On the other hand, she
can’t spend more than you give her and go over the limit — either the
bank-imposed limit or the one you had in mind.
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