Knowledge hub

Banking and credit are infrastructure for everyday money.

The right accounts make money easier to separate and protect. The wrong credit habits can make ordinary spending expensive.

Banking

Separate roles

Checking is for transactions. Savings is for money you do not want to spend today. Emergency funds need access and separation.

Credit

Understand the cost

APR, fees, utilization, due dates, and minimum payments can turn small balances into long-term pressure.

Reports

Watch your record

Credit reports can affect loans, housing, and some financial decisions. Errors should be reviewed and disputed when needed.

Safety

Protect access

Strong passwords, two-factor authentication, fraud alerts, and cautious linking reduce account risk.

Source

Consumer finance topics

The CFPB publishes consumer resources on credit cards, credit reports, debt collection, bank accounts, and fraud.

CFPB resources
Skill

Read account terms

Compare fees, minimums, interest, access, insurance, transfer limits, and account linking before choosing.

Next

Debt hub

If credit card balances are already stressful, move to debt clarity and payoff planning.

Open debt hub
Should emergency money be in checking?

Some cash can stay in checking, but keeping the whole fund there can make it too easy to spend. Many people separate emergency savings.

What makes credit card debt expensive?

High APR, fees, and long payoff timelines can make carried balances expensive, especially when only minimum payments are made.

How do I reduce fraud risk?

Use strong passwords, two-factor authentication, account alerts, careful app permissions, and official complaint channels if something goes wrong.