After my recent post about getting approved with GCredit using the Globe’s Gcash app, I usually get asked about how the finance charges or the interest works. To be honest I feel quite confused as well when I read their terms and conditions but after using them, I can finally share them with you.
Now that I understand their finance charges I am happy to tell you how these works.
Honestly, in the first month, I missed a payment for a few days since I let my mom use my sim card for a while after she lost her globe sim. Just a heads up they call as soon as a day of a missed payment. Apparently, I wasn’t able to prepare for paying it at that time because my salary landed on every biller and groceries I have to deal with when I was advised by my mother.
Having that said I bet you wanna know what are the types of finance charges they give their users. There are two.
Let’s start with Penalties for GCredit
As mentioned above, I wasn’t able to pay on time. After your due date, they’ll charge you a fixed amount of 200 pesos as a penalty for late payment.
This is the first time I got charged for a penalty and I feel so bad about it. 200 pesos is as much as my 2 days of travel allowance for work.
They charge you more if it’s late more than 30 days so here’s the list:
31-60 days – 500 PHP
61- 90 days – 900 PHP
91+ days – 1500 PHP
I don’t know if this charge will stack or how it works but I hope no one gets charged for these amounts. Okay?
Other finance charges for GCredit like Interest
So this is the most confusing part. They charge an interest of 5% for every 30 days. In the past when I just got approved, I thought it works like with credit cards. When you purchase with a credit card it doesn’t charge you any interest as long as you pay it in full before due dates. With Gcredit, they charge a prorated amount of interest from the day of purchase. The interest will be shown on the statement but it’s already counting as soon as you use it.
I will give you an example. Aug 1 you purchased an item for 1000 pesos. Today is August 9. Your purchase is 8 days old now. So we can use two formulas here.
Formula 1:
(5%/30days)*(no.of days) = interest rate
Purchase amount*interest rate = running interest charge
So for the said purchase above it gonna work like this:
(.05/30)*(8)=.013 or 1.3%
1000*.013=13
13 pesos is your current interest charge for that August 1 purchase. It will run until you finally settle that amount.
Formula 2:
((Amount*5%)/30days)(no of days)=interest charge
That formula should work on a scientific calculator. But to do step by step follow this below:
1000*.05=50
50/30=1.66
1.66*8=13.28
It’s just a matter of rounding off.
In my current bill, I got charged for 200 penalties for the past month’s payment issues and 76.23 for the interest. I only had two purchases for this billing cycle and the balance that was paid late is 1594.24. Basically, it runs with a prorated interest since it was paid on July 29 which is included in this cycle. So I computed those two purchases and outstanding for the interest and it gave me an answer of 76.9 pesos. I’m unsure of the computation for the outstanding though.
1594.24*.05 / 30 * 20 = 53.14
565.55*.05 / 30 * 10 = 9.43
1433.25*.05 / 30 * 6 = 14.33
Anyway having the idea on how to compute the charges is good enough even though we don’t really get the exact amount.
In my own thoughts, GCredit isn’t really good for regular purchases. It’s more like an emergency fund for your groceries. I don’t really suggest using it regularly because it would make your expenses a bit higher. It’s still better to use debit cards or credit cards for cashless transactions.
Of course, we don’t really expect a lending company to give you 0% interest for purchases to be paid within the due date. However, GCredit should somehow mimic this kind of advantage you get on regular credit cards.
So I hope this article helps. If you have other questions or comments feel free to ask. Although I can’t really answer an account-related issue. You can directly email GCash or Fuse Lending:
[email protected] or [email protected]
Don’t forget to subscribe and follow
click here to send me Ko-fi
28 thoughts on “Understanding Finance Charges When Using GCredit”
To be fair this is how some credit card companies charge also! If you don’t mind I want to share my experience. I applied for a secured credit card from Security Bank. (Please just google what it is if you’re not familiar with it.) Anyway, for the first few months it was great cause I wasn’t charged interest cause I always paid on time. Then, one month when I forgot to pay on time, I was SHOCKED that my 3k bill had P200-300 interest. I actually don’t remember it that clearly anymore but it was CRAZY. I was so angry! To add salt to the wound, when I withdrew my deposit, they charged me P500! (During my last month in the lock in period, I informed them to just take whatever I owe from the holdout deposit. They said for them to return what’s left of MY money, I had to pay P500) WTF! Long story short – I shredded that card after that horrendous experience and VOWED TO NEVER open an account with them again.
To everyone, please make sure you understand how they’re charging interest before getting a credit card from certain companies.
Thanks so much Miely for this post!
Hi thanks for sharing your experience… My mom had an acct withnsecurity bank before but she swotched over to bdo.. When I had a secured card woth BPI the hold out deposit is non withdrawable so I never encountered such charge.. But with credit card if it has oassed the due date even just for a day the finance charge is usally around that amount because they charge interest and late payment fee all together…that is why it is quite pricey to pay finance charges unlike with GCredit.. They charge interest from the date of purchase not plus penalties if late payments so I would still prefer using credit cards than GCredit.. Thanks again for passing by and sharing your experience with Security Bank. Hope to see you here again. ?
Pano kapag for example 30k na limit ko tapos ginamit ko gcredit worth 20k, 30 days to pay lang talaga siya? Dapat sana may loan term choices para may point naman, sino ba gagamit kapag i rereturn mo rin loan mo in 30 days tapos 20k.
Hi po you can pay in longer terms but please take note that it will charge penalty after 30 days plus the daily percentage of interest. Not really advisable to use for large purchases
Hi po I encounter your blog, and really confuse. Pwede po ba mag tanong what if you have 9k gcredit at nagamit mo for 1 month can I pay it for 60 or 90 days and how much will be the interest?
If every 30 days po is 5% magging 15% to ung tubo nya sa 90 days..so halos 10,588 ung lalabas non. Pero I suggest na hulog hulugan nyo sya whenever you can para bumaba ung principal kasi pag gnon mas bababa dn ung interest nila.
this is a very helpful blog, thank you so much! I got offered to activate my gcredit right away (since I used gcash pretty regularly) but haven’t really got the time to do anything about it. but now I got some time to poke around the app and was reading the fine print– I DID NOT like how it will auto debit any pending amount from your Gcash if it will fit the due amount. so I paused, and looked around the net for reviews and found your blog. THANK YOU so much for explaining how the charging works IRL. its practically useless as a credit card since it charges immediately from Day 1 of the credit purchase. indeed its flattering to be considered trustworthy to be practically auto qualified for a credit line, but as you have experienced, it’s even worse than regular credit cards lol!
Hi thanks for your feedback. Hope you’ll follow this blog. ?
Yeah I no longer use it as well. (RipGcredit) Hahaha lol
Thanks for the info
You can only use gcredit once although you still have remaining credit limits?base on my experience
So far I am able to use it on multiple purchases