if it is under your name and she is an additional card holder but the bill comes to you I think you are responsible for the debt.It might be worth asking your credit card provider.
That means you agree to be completely responsible for paying the balance of the account if the primary card holder defaults on the payments. You may not know if the primary card holder is not paying the monthly bill and your credit record will be affected if the payments are late.You should be very careful about co-signing for a credit card and make absolutely sure you understand your liability if the charges are not paid.
The estate is primarily responsible. However, a spouse is normally considered to benefit from such debt and can be held responsible.
You are because you incurred the debt.
Assuming the student credit card is a standard issue bank credit card and not issued solely through the school, there is no difference. A credit card company might advertise to student with special introductory rates or with a spin that targets that demographic, but in the end a credit card is a credit card. Incidentally, credit card debt among college students is the fasted growing segment of debt. Credit card companies aggressively seek students who are too young or inexperienced to realize that once introductory specials have expired and the "freedom" of buying pizza on credit has worn off, they're responsible for large sums of money that accrue interest.
No.
if it is under your name and she is an additional card holder but the bill comes to you I think you are responsible for the debt.It might be worth asking your credit card provider.
Yes. STATED BY AUTHOR
If you held the account in name either solely or jointly and used the credit available you are still responsible for the debt, the error of the SSN is irrelevant.
Only if the married couple resided in a community property state.
No. The person named on the credit agreement is solely responsible for all debts incurred on the card. The only exception is - if the account is in joint names - and BOTH parties signed the agreement. In that case - each signatory would be equally responsible for the debt.
That means you agree to be completely responsible for paying the balance of the account if the primary card holder defaults on the payments. You may not know if the primary card holder is not paying the monthly bill and your credit record will be affected if the payments are late.You should be very careful about co-signing for a credit card and make absolutely sure you understand your liability if the charges are not paid.
The owner and/or joint owner are solely responsible for the credit card. This includes everything from making payments, dealing with fraud, being reported to the credit bureaus, etc. If an authorized user abuses his/her credit spending, the responsibility still lies in the hands of the owner of the credit card.
The estate is responsible for the decedent's credit card debt.
Since when can a child have credit? They need a steady job in order to apply for credit. And Mom would have to sign for that, if the child is under the age of majority....so in fact Mom is responsible to pay the bill if the child defaults on payments. Basically it is Mom's credit card.
No. The card holder is responsible for all debt on the credit they extended to him. (You may be responsible to the credit card holder for the debt he incurred for you, if that was your agreement).
Answer credit cardfrom past experience with my mother in law, you are responsible for the credit card balance The surviving joint account holder would be responsible for the entire amount owed.Credit Card DebtUnfortunantly you will be responsible for all of it.