November 10, 2010 4:07 PM
- Text
Pre-Paid Kardashian Kard is Not Your Best Option
Kim Kardashian's family once staged a shopping intervention to slow her runaway spending. Even a reality TV star only has so many resources, it seems, and when you start carting away handbags that cost $30,000, well, it adds up.Now Kardashian and her sisters Kourtney and Khloe are hawking a pre-paid MasterCard branded debit card that they call the Kardashian Kard. For teens that follow these sisters, I suppose this card will make Keeping Up With The Kardashians at the mall a lot easier -- at least until the card must be reloaded.
The Kardashian Kard is being marketed specifically to teens as young as 13. Let's call it a Kiddie Kard. The Kardashians are far from alone when it comes to cashing in on kids this way. There's a whole series of youth oriented pre-paid debit cards from MYPLASH picturing rockers, rappers and gamers. Vampires, too, which is especially fitting.
There is nothing wrong with a pre-paid debit card for young people. Pre-paid cards have a lot of advantages:
- Kids can use a pre-paid card to shop online.
- Parents get a detailed spending report.
- Over drafting is not a risk.
- Pre-paid cards are easy to re-load and thus are good vehicles for paying allowance, assuming no or low re-load fees.
- Kids become familiar with plastic in a controlled environment.
- In some cases, your child begins to build a credit score.
The worst feature of this card is probably that it glorifies glam at any expense simply because of the Kardashian name. Beyond that, though, there is the high cost to get started, $59.95 (this includes fees for the first six months); the $7.95 monthly fee; and the $2 per item charge when paying bills. You'll also get dinged up to $2.50 for every ATM withdrawal and $1.50 for every call to the service center.
Still, this Kiddie Kard compares reasonably well in other areas, most notably by not charging a fee at the point of purchase (a lot of pre-paid cards charge $1 or $2) and carrying a low re-load fee of $1, which makes it suitable for a monthly allowance of, say, $50 (which equates to a 2% convenience charge).
The Kardashian Kard is not your best option, though. Upside Edge from Visa is a teen card that costs just $29.95 a year, allows for free reloads from a parent checking account and gives cash back rewards equal to 1% of funds loaded. Wal-Mart MoneyCard is another smart option, though it is not a teen card per se. The MoneyCard costs $3 to open and $3 a month to carry. There's never a transaction fee and Wal-mart will waive most fees if you enroll in a direct deposit plan.
Of course, the Kardashian girls wouldn't be caught dead shopping at Wal-Mart. (Selling, yes; shopping, no.) Which is another valuable lesson for your teens, if they can somehow come to understand it.
Photo courtesy Flickr user Kalumba_joel_ego.
Add A Comment +
Popular Now in MoneyWatch
- Trump overshadows Romney with 'birther' talk
- Report: Zuckerberg drops off 40 richest list
- What are the most dangerous websites?
- 10 Best Countries To Live and Work Abroad
- Facebook shares close at new low
- 4 Things Not to Buy at Costco
- Top 10 Cities for Single Men
- The 7 Interview Questions You Must Ask
- Used Cars: 5 to Avoid (and 5 Better Alternatives)
- How to craft an email that gets a reply
- Average home prices hit mid-2002 levels
- The new rules on dressing for success
- 5 reasons to invest in a 529 plan
- How to extend your "shelf life" on the job
- Reverse Cell Phone Lookup Service is Free and Simple
- What happens to BlackBerry users if RIM tanks?






