Apple Card Monthly Installments Term for Apple Watch to Change From 24 Months to...
source link: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/apple-card-monthly-installments-term-for-apple-watch-to-change-from-24-months-to-12-months.2393018/
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Apple Card Monthly Installments Term for Apple Watch to Change From 24 Months to 12 Months
Apple offers a 24-month installment term for iPhones, a 12-month term for Macs and iPads, and a six-month term for AirPods and Apple TVs. Other eligible products and accessories are outlined in a support document on Apple's website.
(Thanks, Brandon Fawcett!)
Article Link: Apple Card Monthly Installments Term for Apple Watch to Change From 24 Months to 12 Months
SDJim
macrumors 6502a
Glad this is still an option, though, it's definitely a nice perk of the Apple Card, IMO.
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F23
macrumors 6502
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BasedReborn
macrumors member
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I wouldn't be surprised if there has been a high rate of late payments and defaults (re: Apple purchases) and GS and Apple are trying to mitigate the losses.This means Apple wants you to pay off and upgrade your Apple Watch every single year. Every 12 months or so. Furthermore, It's interest-free so you can't beat that.
Reactions: MacKid, sinoka56, amartinez1660 and 5 others
No interest on 24 months is an amazing deal. Why would anyone NOT want that? Especially since most people don’t upgrade yearly.I wish every item is 12-month. 24-installment plan is simply too long for an iPhone.
Reactions: lockhartt, macMD, magicman32 and 10 others
There is nothing preventing someone from paying off the loan early. The problem is too many people get in over their head with the enticement of small monthly payments.I wish every item is 12-month. 24-installment plan is simply too long for an iPhone.
It always struck me a little odd that the iPhone plans were 24 months, but Macs are 12. Like, you need to stretch a $1k phone out over two years, but you should pay off a $3k MBP in one?I wish every item is 12-month. 24-installment plan is simply too long for an iPhone.
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spartan1967
macrumors 6502
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Orange Bat
macrumors 6502a
Yes, when I tap the Pay Early link. Although I pay my balance off every month, there should be a more flexible way to pay off just the device.There is nothing preventing someone from paying off the loan early. The problem is too many people get in over their head with the enticement of small monthly payments.
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contraband
macrumors newbie
There can be. If you have multiple concurrent payment schemes (say, you begin paying off phone 1 this year, and phone 2 next year), you cannot pay off one without paying off the other. So 12 months in, if you want to pay off the remainder of only phone 1 and leave just the monthly payments for phone 2, you cannot. All active payment schemes are consolidated into a single item. More control over the schemes and payments would be nice.There is nothing preventing someone from paying off the loan early. The problem is too many people get in over their head with the enticement of small monthly payments.
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I think when they went with the phones at 24 months it was in line with what cell phone companies did withtheir 2 year upgrade model.It always struck me a little odd that the iPhone plans were 24 months, but Macs are 12. Like, you need to stretch a $1k phone out over two years, but you should pay off a $3k MBP in one?
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dancefreak
macrumors 6502
If you go to installments in the wallet and select a loan and select pay early, your payment will be towards the balance of your oldest installment loan. So you can do exactly what you're describing. The loans aren't consolidated.There can be. If you have multiple concurrent payment schemes (say, you begin paying off phone 1 this year, and phone 2 next year), you cannot pay off one without paying off the other. So 12 months in, if you want to pay off the remainder of only phone 1 and leave just the monthly payments for phone 2, you cannot. All active payment schemes are consolidated into a single item. More control over the schemes and payments would be nice.
Reactions: zecanard
coolfactor
macrumors 603
Meanwhile, Apple has already paid FULL price for manufacturing and supporting the device for their customer. 🤗Sales are slumping, need that cash faster then ever.
Reactions: iGeneo
I kind of LOLed when they told me it was 24 months but whatever, that's 24 months of the cash sitting in my high yield savings collecting interest. I'll do just about anything if it earns me an extra penny, including signing up for ridiculous financing lengths. Since Apple charges 0% interest on their plans, I end up making money to buy my stuff in installments.
CapitalIdea
macrumors regular
There is a great optional program that helps people have total control of the payments and schemes:There can be. If you have multiple concurrent payment schemes (say, you begin paying off phone 1 this year, and phone 2 next year), you cannot pay off one without paying off the other. So 12 months in, if you want to pay off the remainder of only phone 1 and leave just the monthly payments for phone 2, you cannot. All active payment schemes are consolidated into a single item. More control over the schemes and payments would be nice.
Reactions: 1984 Mac Guru, AxiomaticRubric and iGeneo
If you are organized, ANYTHING you can put on interest free financing is beneficial for you - holding the money for the longest possible time can then generate interest FOR YOU.Probably shouldn't be taking 2 years to pay off a watch anyway...
Glad this is still an option, though, it's definitely a nice perk of the Apple Card, IMO.
A Watch may not seem much, but multiple items can make a nice return. On the other hand, if you are using this to buy things you can't afford and will end up paying late fees, yeah better to not even buy the damn watch.
chairguru22
macrumors 6502a
Exactly! I’ve only paid $266 on my Apple Watch Ultra since I got it day 1! Why not???No interest on 24 months is an amazing deal. Why would anyone NOT want that? Especially since most people don’t upgrade yearly.
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