The card will be valid until the last day of the month listed on the card, ie, a card with an expiration date of 06/13 would be valid until 11:59 pm on June 30, 2013 and would be invalid on the morning of July 1, 2013.
after 10 month
At the end!
As far as I know, debit cards don't expire monthly. Mine hasn't
14 months
Credit card debt does not expire. If collection for the debt becomes a liability, then the creditor can write off the debt as a total loss or warrant a reposession of property, but the debt itself will never expire on its own.
American Express cards expire at the end of the month printed on the card.
after 10 month
At the end!
As far as I know, debit cards don't expire monthly. Mine hasn't
14 months
If you mean the card itself, it's usually 1 to 2 years. If you mean the credit you have used, it's at the end or near the end of each month.
Credit card debt does not expire. If collection for the debt becomes a liability, then the creditor can write off the debt as a total loss or warrant a reposession of property, but the debt itself will never expire on its own.
An expiration date is when whatever the item is will expire. Expire means it is no longer good.
If the card is a simple debit only card it does not expire. If it has a credit card logo on it (Visa or Mastercard) then it is a combination debit/credit card used places that don't accept plain debit cards and it has an expiration date on the front under the account number.
No, credit card companies submit to the credit agencies on a monthly basis at the end of each month. So if you are checking your credit card the 3rd week of the month you will see last months credit card statement balance not what you currently owe on your credit card.
when it takes you more than a month to pay off your credit card debt it makes your credit score higher
Debit cards and credit cards are not the same. Debit cards are the one issued by your bank so that you can access your bank account. Most of them do not expire, and are replaced only when the bank makes a change to the account access system (i.e. from magnetic strips to electronic chips) or when you report your card as stolen. For debit cards, most of the cards do not expire. With credit cards, it's another story. Credit cards expire. Wherever you live and whichever credit card company you choose, your card will expire. The only difference between the companies and your location is the life span of your card. With one company it could be 3 years, and with another one 5 years.