Average credit card spend falls by £70

21st December 2022

The average spend on credit cards dropped by £70 in the space of two months, according to research by FICO for October.

The data also showed that average total sales were 5 percent lower than September at £740. The average active balance on credit card accounts also dropped in October to £1,570 – 1.5 percent lower than September. Whilst the percentage of payments to balance dropped by 0.8 percent in October, continuing a trend seen since May

Year-on-year missed payments have increased across all payment cycles, with two missed payments showing the greatest year on year growth at nearly 7 percent with those missing one payment in September struggled to stay on top of their debt as a 7 percent month-on-month increase in two missed payments recorded.

The data also indicated that consumers reduced reliance on credit cards for cash withdrawals with a 5.5 percent drop month-on-month.

Analysis of the largest consortium of UK cards data illustrates the financial challenges faced by many people, as pandemic savings dwindle and the cost-of-living escalates. While the latest ONS data reports a small 0.5 percent rebound in GDP for the month, in the three months to October GDP shrank by 0.3 percent compared with the previous three months. This drop in spending is also reflected in the FICO data.

Average spend across credit card accounts dropped by £70 over September and October. And the percentage of payments to balance – reflecting both earnings and savings to stay on top of credit commitments – dropped by 0.8 percent month-on-month.

But perhaps most significant for credit providers is the year-on-year trend in missed payments. Across all payment cycles – one, two and three missed payments – there has been an increase over October 2021.

With two missed payments increasing month on month by 6.8 percent in October, credit providers will be wanting to understand the causes to offer the right support to account holders.

There is, however, one area where financial prudence is evident. The percentage of accountholders using their card to withdraw cash dropped month-on-month by 5.5 percent in October and, reflecting a pattern seen all year, by 22.3 percent year-on-year. It appears that cardholders are aware of the high cost of using credit cards to withdraw cash due to the higher APR charged.

Lenders can use segmentation analysis on their portfolios to ensure that their web and mobile applications encourage consumers in distress to make contact at the first indications of difficulty, and to consider establishing special payment plans for those struggling to stay on top.

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