• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Ask Liz Weston

Get smart with your money

  • About
  • Liz’s Books
  • Speaking
  • Disclosure
  • Contact

Liz Weston

This week’s money news

June 24, 2024 By Liz Weston

This week’s top story: What impacts bank account rates Mid-2024? In other news: 7 tips to prepare your house for hurricane season, weekly mortgage rates trend lower, and PAYE.

What Impacts Bank Account Rates Mid-2024?
The Fed rate and banks’ competition for consumer deposits play key roles.

7 Tips to Prepare Your House for Hurricane Season
This year’s hurricane season could bring over a dozen hurricanes to U.S. coasts — is your home ready for the wind and rain?

Weekly Mortgage Rates Trend Lower; Report Reveals Housing Strain
Mortgage rates continued slipping downward this week, in the absence of any major market movements or economic data releases.

Graduate Borrowers, Consider This Student Loan Plan Before July 1
If you have graduate debt and qualify for PAYE, consider applying before July 1, when PAYE will permanently close to new enrollment. Two other repayment plans will also limit enrollment in July.

Filed Under: Liz's Blog Tagged With: homeowners insurance, hurricanes, Insurance, mortgage rates, natural disasters, savings account rates, Student Loans

Q&A: My kids grew up. Will their credit scores go down?

June 24, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: Many years ago I took out a credit card to pay for my two children’s college expenses. They were authorized users for miscellaneous expenses. They no longer use or even have access to the cards. Now they are both in stable, well-paying jobs. I would like to keep the card but remove the authorized users. How would this affect their credit scores? Or mine, for that matter?

Answer: You helped your kids establish good credit by adding them as authorized users. Removing them won’t affect your credit scores. The effect on their scores depends on how well they’ve managed credit on their own.

The impact should be minimal if they’ve continued to build credit by opening their own credit cards and paying those on time. Ideally, for credit-building purposes, they’ll also have a solid history paying an installment loan, such as a mortgage, student loan or auto loan.

If they haven’t used credit much and have a thin file — generally, fewer than five accounts showing on their credit reports — the damage might be more significant. If that’s the case, you may want to delay removing them as authorized users while they open other lines of credit. They should know that they don’t have to carry debt to have good credit: Just using credit cards lightly and paying the balances in full should do the job.

Filed Under: Credit Scoring, Kids & Money, Q&A Tagged With: authorized user, building credit, Credit Cards, Credit Score, Credit Scores, credit scoring, kids and money

Q&A: What’s ‘substantial’ in the eyes of Uncle Sam?

June 24, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I am retired and subject to both the windfall elimination provision and the government pension offset. In a recent column you indicated someone wouldn’t be subject to the windfall elimination provision if they had 30 years of “substantial earnings” in a job where Social Security tax was withheld. I contributed to Social Security for 32 years. How does one determine if these annual earnings are “substantial”?

Answer: Social Security has a two-page pamphlet about the windfall elimination provision that you can find online or request from the agency by calling (800) 772-1213. The pamphlet features a chart of the earnings required each year to be considered substantial. In 1992, for example, the amount was $10,350. In 2024, it’s $31,275. If you create a My Social Security online account — and you should — you can compare the amounts to what you earned during the years you contributed to the system.

Social Security has already done this and concluded you’re subject to the provision, which reduces but doesn’t eliminate your benefit because of the pension you earned from a job that didn’t pay into Social Security. If your Social Security record is inaccurate, though, you can contact the agency to correct it. You’ll probably need some kind of proof, such as pay stubs or W2s, so hopefully you’ve kept good records over the years.

Filed Under: Q&A, Social Security Tagged With: government pension offset, GPO, Social Security, substantial earnings, WEP, windfall elimination provision

Q&A: I’ve got a 457(b), not a 401(k). Are they insured the same?

June 24, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: As an employee of a public agency that offers a 457(b) account, it would be helpful to know if these accounts are insured in a manner similar to a 401(k).

Answer: Employer-provided, tax-deferred 457(b) accounts are quite similar to 401(k)s. Both allow employees to make pretax contributions to a retirement account that can be invested for future growth. The accounts aren’t insured the same way bank accounts are, but the money is kept in a separate trust that’s protected from creditors.

Filed Under: Q&A, Retirement Savings Tagged With: 401(k), 457, 457 plan, 457(b), payroll tax deferral, retirement accounts

Q&A: Should I be afraid of payment apps?

June 24, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I pay rent via check (yes, I am aware of the risks). My landlord would prefer that I use Zelle, which has drawbacks. People have had their bank accounts drained. Also, I heard that peer-to-peer money transfer apps should only be used by friends and family, not for business, and not for large sums of money.

Answer: As you may know, Zelle payments are made instantly. If you send the money to the wrong party, you could be out of luck. Federal law protects you if your account was hacked, but not if you make a mistake or have been duped into sending money to a scam artist. (Zelle does investigate allegations of fraud, however, and may return the money if you’ve been deceived.)

Many people are comfortable using Zelle and other payment systems to send money to people and businesses they know well, while others aren’t. If you continue to use checks, make sure to mail them directly at the post office or use a shipping service that offers a tracking number, such as Fedex. Monitor your account closely and set up alerts that notify you when checks over a certain amount are cashed. Fraud related to check theft has soared, so you’ll need to be extra vigilant if you continue sending paper checks.

Filed Under: Identity Theft, Q&A, Scams Tagged With: check fraud, checks, fraud, mail theft, mobile payment apps, paper check fraud, payment apps, Zelle, Zelle scams

This week’s money news

June 17, 2024 By Liz Weston

This week’s top story: What Visa’s upcoming changes might mean for your wallet. In other news: HELOC to pay kid’s college tuition or not, weekly mortgage rates dip, and what women should know about their investing power and needs.

What Visa’s Upcoming Changes Might Mean for Your Wallet
Combining multiple payment methods onto one ‘credential’ is one way Visa is trying to make the spending experience seamless.

Should You Use a HELOC to Pay Your Kid’s College Tuition?
Home equity could provide an ample source of college funding, but borrowing against it is a financially risky move.

Weekly Mortgage Rates Dip, Hopes of Multiple Rate Cuts Wane
Average fixed mortgage rates fell slightly this week, with the 30-year rate continuing last week’s dip below 7%.

What Women Should Know About Their Investing Power and Needs
Women face different challenges, and some advantages, when it comes to managing their money over the long term.

Filed Under: Liz's Blog Tagged With: cashless payments, digital banking, HELOC, Investing, mortgage rates, Visa, women and investing

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 779
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Ask Liz Weston 2.0 On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in