The Kohl's credit card only works in Kohls. It is not a major credit card and therefore can only be used at that store. Other credit cards are available for use at other stores.
Only if you don't get a card from the store
- a refund check - a credit to the credit card used - a store credit redeemable only at that store
- a refund check - a credit to the credit card used - a store credit redeemable only at that store
No it is not !If a person pays for goods or services by credit card, the Credit Card Company is the only organisation allowed to retain details about the customers card.
You can only get a Valero credit card from Valero's official website. This is a store credit card, and therefore carries higher interest rates than regular credit cards.
The Macy's department store offers a charge card and a credit card. Their charge card can only be used at Macy's, and a credit card can be used anywhere.
Only in the JC Penney store. It is not like a Visa or Master Card that can be used everywhere. Not so with the JC Penney credit card.
Major credit cards such as Visa, MasterCard, Discover, etc. are accepted by nearly all purchasing web sites. Store credit cards such as Target, Kohls, Macys, Sears, etc. are only accepted by web sites from the issuing store.
No they should not. The security of credit card transactions should mean that the only information the store should be keeping is how much was spent in store each day
The regular Target credit card can only be used in store and online. But, they also have a Target Visa Card that you can use anywhere that Visa is accepted.
As a consumer, you don't start out with a 'freebee' or credit balance. Most App Store accounts have a credit card attached to them, and are limited only by the credit card's credit limit. If you use an Itunes or App Store gift card, it is a credit based on the value printed on the card. As a developer, you only make money when a paid app sells. You get 70% of the selling price you set. Apple gets the other 30% for hosting the app, approval and quality control and account management.
That depends on the store, really. I'm not sure if they're supposed to (legally speaking), but in my experience, businesses only ask for ID when using a credit card maybe 3% of the time.