You can make a United℠ Business Card payment online, by phone, through the Chase mobile app, by mail or at a branch. To pay a United Business Credit Card bill online, log in to your online account and click on “Pay card.” Then, choose how much to pay, when to pay it, and where the payment is coming from. Chase does allow cardholders to set up automatic payments, too.
Ways to Make a United Business Credit Card Payment
By phone: Call 1-800-436-7958 and enter your card information when prompted, then follow the prompts to make a credit card payment.
Online: Log in to your online account and click on “Pay card.”
Through the mobile app: Log in to your account and select your card, then tap “Pay card.”
By mail: Send a check or money order (but not cash) to
Cardmember Services
P.O. Box 6294
Carol Stream, IL 60197-6294
Make sure to send it early enough that it will arrive by the due date. Write your credit card number on the check, too.
At a branch: You can make a payment at any Chase branch during normal business hours.
Yes, if you pay your credit card early, you can use it again. You can use a credit card whenever there’s enough credit available to complete a purchase. Your available credit decreases by the amount of any purchase you make and increases by the amount of any payment. So paying your credit card bill early (and often) can help you avoid … read full answermaxing out your spending limit and having a purchase get declined. It will also reduce your credit utilization, which is good for your credit score. And it will save you a lot of money on interest. Let’s do a quick example.
Imagine your credit line is $1,000, and you make a $300 purchase. Your available credit goes down from $1,000 to $700. You could make up to $700 more in purchases at this point. But that wouldn’t be the best idea because using more than 30% of your credit line can hurt your credit. That’s where paying your bill early comes in. You have the right to make a credit card payment at any time. So if you were to pay off the $300 you spent, without spending any more, your available credit would go back to $1,000.
Now, it’s important to think about the schedule for credit card payments. Once your billing cycle closes, there is usually a grace period of 21 days or more until your due date, during which you can pay off your purchases without incurring interest.
You’re completely allowed to use your credit card during the grace period. Any purchases you make after your closing date are part of the next billing cycle, not the current one. But if you don’t pay the full balance listed on your statement, you’ll lose the grace period. That means you won’t get 21+ days between the close of your next billing cycle and your due date before interest kicks in. It will start accruing right away.
Long story short, paying your credit card early will let you use it again, assuming you have little-to-no available credit to start with. It can also improve your credit utilization. Just make sure you remember to pay your full statement balance by the due date, or else you may rack up some interest charges.
It takes 1 to 3 business days for a credit card payment to post to your account if you pay online or by phone. Payments by mail will take a few days longer. If your credit card is linked to your checking account and both accounts are from the same bank, your payment may post immediately following the transaction. Your issuer’s payment timelines are included in your monthly statement, or you can call customer service for more information.… read full answer
In order to understand how long it takes an issuer to post your credit card payments, it’s important to know the difference between “credited,” “posted,” and “cleared.” When you submit a payment, the amount is credited, meaning the issuer recognizes you paid it. But it may not post, or be reflected in your available credit, for another day or two. When a payment is cleared, the issuer has actually received the money. As long as your payment is at least credited by the due date, it’s considered on time, assuming the transaction goes through.
To avoid any worry about how long it will take for a credit card payment to post, set up your account for autopay. This feature automatically debits your bank account for a pre-determined amount on the card’s payment due date. As long as you have enough money in the account to cover the transaction, your payments will never be late. You should be able to set up autopay online or by calling your issuer’s customer service department.
A credit card billing cycle is the period of time between two credit card statements, usually lasting 28-31 days. On the last day of a credit card’s billing cycle – also known as the closing date –the card’s issuer will compile the account’s billing statement. This includes a bill for all the charges made to your account during that billing cycle, minus any payments made. You can find the starting and ending dates for your credit card’s billing cycle on your monthly statement.… read full answer
Understanding your credit card’s billing cycle is important for a few reasons. First, it’s important because your statement balance – the amount you have to pay by the due date to avoid interest – is comprised of purchases made during the billing cycle. The statement balance also gets reported to credit bureaus each month and factors into your credit utilization.
Secondly, the start and end of a billing cycle determine when you have to pay for a given purchase or fee. For example, if you purchase a big TV the day before your statement closing date, you’ll owe that money on your next due date – usually about 25 days later, or however long your grace period is. However, if you buy the TV the day after your statement closing date, it will land on the next statement. So you won’t have to pay for the TV until that statement’s due date, which could be 50 or so days later. For those budgeting out big purchases, timing the purchase to get an extra few weeks to pay can make a huge difference.
Billing cycles are also important if you are taking advantage of a 0% APR intro period. These zero-interest periods are sometimes measured in billing cycles, rather than months. This difference can be worth calculating if the billing cycle is shorter than a typical month, and you are tracking how much time you have to pay off a purchase before the promotional APR period ends.
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