Submitted by Suspicious-Class-766 t3_zz80jq in personalfinance

The tire store/Goodyear has a promotion. If I open a credit card (Visa, I think) with them, I get an extra $100 off a set of new tires. Any reason not to do so?

I have excellent credit, a Mastercard and a Visa, both of which are paid in full every month. And I have no need of credit at this point in my life, so I don't care about a ding on my score for a hard pull.

My plan was to never use it, and cancel as soon as I can. I will certainly read the fine print.

What say you, redditors? Thanks for your input.

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WrathOfMayo t1_j2a282d wrote

If you're going to open up a new credit card, you might consider one that has better rewards than you currently have and/or an eqvalent sign-on bonus or better.

To me, it's a risk/reward decision. But $100 off does seem alittle low reward to me. I just opened up a one that got me a $200 sign-on bonus and 0% APR for a year.

Just my two-cents.

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pancak3d t1_j2a3urv wrote

I avoid these because I'd rather sign up for a new card with a bigger bonus.

If you do choose to sign up, there's really no benefit to cancelling it (assuming no annual fee). Just chuck it in a drawer. Cancelling actually hurts your credit more than just keeping it open.

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9pmt1ll1come t1_j2azznx wrote

I find it absolutely insane that some people will open up a CC (hard hit) because of something like $100. To me this isn't worth the hassle of spending an extra 5 minutes giving some random person my financial information (not to mention the risk associated with it). It would take something like $1000 minimum for me to even consider something like this.

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MrBalll t1_j2bqd82 wrote

I'm with you on this.
$100 discount for something you replace every...five years? Not at all worth it. Just Uber for one weekend and there you go.

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ahj3939 t1_j2ackpf wrote

Chase seems to always offer $200 bonus for spending $500 in the first 90 days on a few of their $0 annual fee cards and I think that should be your baseline.

Think of it as 1% cash back, you can get that any day any where so it's not really a great deal. Anything giving you less without another valuable benefit is not worth your time.

But don't cancel credit cards! You want to open several good accounts and keep them open in the long run to build credit. The Chase Freedom Flex for e.g. is pretty good, you get a few months out of the year you can earn 5% cash back on gas, groceries, paypal (so basically 80% of online shopping), etc.

What does good year give you? 1% rewards towards your next purchase of good year tires? But I like Michelin, they make the best summer tires.

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crispix_and_oj t1_j2ajjwh wrote

I wouldn’t open a credit card just for $100 off tires. Discount Tire has regular revolving deals where you can get a visa gift card for buying tires. The last two times I bought Michelin tires for my car, it came with a $100 mail in rebate.

There are other ways to make $100 that don’t require a credit card.

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virtualchoirboy t1_j2a1m6h wrote

Always remember that the $100 has to come from somewhere. Often, it's inflated prices from the beginning so it pays to shop around.

Personally, I stopped using tire stores and get my tires from Tirerack now. Just picked up a set of 4 tires on Wednesday for a Volvo XC90 for $906 out the door. Will have them installed by my local installer on Sunday (yes, he's open on New Years Day) for $90 which includes disposal of the old tires for me. The local tire shop wanted $1,000+tax before an upcharge for a 4-wheel alignment, mounting, balancing, and road hazard (lots of potholes around me - road hazard has saved me several times).

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Omniwar t1_j2apioe wrote

For what it's worth, the Goodyear credit card offer OP is describing (most likely) applies to GY tires purchased at TireRack too. For me it was a $75 base manufacturer mail-in-rebate which was bumped up to $150 if I had the goodyear credit card. Not worth burning a credit card slot for $75, obviously, so I just took the base mail-in-rebate.

+1 on buying online and having the tires shipped to an independent installer though. Much cheaper than the dealer and better service than the big shops i.e. Firestone/Discount Tire/Pepboys

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