Small Business v. Personal Credit Cards: How They're Different

What's better for you? A small business or personal credit card?

ByABC News
August 24, 2013, 8:35 AM
The Small Business Credit Card Act of 2013 attempts to amend the Truth in Lending Act to provide coverage for small business credit cards.
The Small Business Credit Card Act of 2013 attempts to amend the Truth in Lending Act to provide coverage for small business credit cards.
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Aug. 24, 2013 — -- intro: When Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., introduced the Small Business Credit Card Act of 2013 to Congress back in June, she was attempting to right a wrong that has persisted since the original CARD Act took effect in October 2010.

The landmark law, which has increased transparency and bolstered consumer rights throughout the credit card industry, does not apply to credit cards branded for small business use. And while Lowey's bill has the potential to correct this oversight, it has only a 1 percent chance of being enacted, according to GovTrack.

The roughly 37 percent of small business owners who leverage credit card debt each year must therefore learn how to get by without important legislatively provided rights if they wish to achieve debt stability and avoid losing money. CardHub conducted a study analyzing the small business credit card policies employed by the nation's 10 largest issuers, and the five major takeaways are listed below.

quicklist:1title: Issuers Can Increase Small Business Interest Rates at Willtext: One of the most important protections afforded to consumers by the CARD Act is that which prevents increased interest rates from being applied to existing balances unless an account holder is at least 60 days delinquent on payment. Issuers can still use bait-and-switch pricing with business credit cards, however -- a fact that makes debt stability impossible to achieve. Without debt stability, small business owners cannot plan strategically or confidently allocate funds. Bank of America is the only major issuer that has extended the CARD Act policy against arbitrary interest rate increases to its business-branded cards.

quicklist:2title: Small Business Credit Cards Are Personal in Naturetext: Despite the obvious regulatory imbalance, small business credit cards are inherently personal. If you submit a business credit card application for your company, the issuing bank will review your personal credit standing. Then, if you're approved, account management will be reflected on your personal credit reports and you'll be personally liable for account balances.

quicklist:3title: You Might Not Get Much Advance Warning of Account Changestext: The CARD Act requires banks to give customers at least 45 days notice before making key changes to their accounts, such as altering its fee or interest rate structure. While they don't have to provide small business owners with the same type of warning, four of the eight largest issuers in the country have proactively adopted this policy for all of their customers.

quicklist:4title: Payment Allocation Might Not Be Favorabletext: With a general consumer credit card, issuers must allocate the amount of your monthly payment above the minimum required to your most expensive debt. With a small business credit card, however, they can allocate payments as they please. That means if you transfer a balance to a business card that you also use for everyday spending, the balance with the highest interest rate will stick around longest, leading to more expensive finance charges. Only American Express, Bank of America, and Capital One have extended CARD Act payment allocation guidelines to their business credit cards.

quicklist:5title: Small Business Cards Also Offer Business-Oriented Perkstext: When it comes to expense categories like telecommunications services and office supplies, business credit cards offer by far the highest rewards earnings rates. They also provide helpful expense management tools and the ability to have numerous co-signers with customized spending limits.

What should you take from all of this? Well, general-consumer credit cards have an obvious advantage in terms of user protections, and they do not increase a small business owner's personal liability. But small business credit cards also offer certain advantages tied to everyday spending. You should find a way to include both in your business repertoire as a result.

The best strategy would be to open a business rewards credit card for everyday use as well as a 0 percent general consumer card for funding small business operations. This will give you the best of both worlds until Congress wakes up and starts passing new legislation, rather than filibustering and campaigning their terms away.

This work is the opinion of the columnist and in no way reflects the opinion of ABC News.

Odysseas Papadimitriou is CEO of the credit card comparison website CardHub and the new personal finance social network WalletHub.