Miles Brucker articles

Parents With Son

My parents want me to help pay off their credit cards, but they keep spending. Am I just enabling them?

If your parents ask you to help pay off their credit cards, your first instinct may be love, guilt, or panic. That is especially true if they sound overwhelmed and you have the cash to step in. But if they keep charging new purchases while asking for help, the real question is not just whether they need money. It is whether your money is solving the problem or quietly feeding it.
April 30, 2026 Miles Brucker
Rent due, eviction looming

My landlord is threatening to evict me for paying rent a few days late. Can he really do that after one time?

If your landlord is threatening eviction because your rent was a few days late, it can feel like the floor just dropped out from under you. The short answer is that a landlord may be able to start the eviction process after late rent, but they usually cannot legally throw you out overnight. In most places, the rules depend on your lease, your state law, and whether your landlord follows the formal court process.
April 27, 2026 Miles Brucker

My friend says you should never pay your whole rent because "you can always negotiate later." Is that actually a thing?

It sounds bold and a little clever. Pay less than your full rent now, then negotiate later when the landlord wants the money. In real life, that is usually not a smart strategy, and in many places it can put you on a fast track to late fees, eviction notices, damaged credit, or all three.
April 22, 2026 Miles Brucker
frustrated man in disbelief sitting with credit/debit card and documents

My bank won't reverse a fraudulent charge. The teller says I "waited too long." How much time do you actually have?

Getting told your bank will not reverse a fraudulent charge because you “waited too long” feels like a punch to the gut. The frustrating part is that the deadline depends on what kind of payment was involved. Credit cards, debit cards, ATM withdrawals, wire transfers, and payment apps can all follow different rules.
April 22, 2026 Miles Brucker
concerned and conflicted young man being persuaded by parents

My parents want me to put utilities in my name for their house, but I'm worried about the risk. Should I say no?

When parents ask an adult child to put utilities in their name, it can sound harmless. It feels like paperwork, not a major financial commitment. But the second your name is on the account, the bills and any damage to your credit can become your problem too.
April 21, 2026 Miles Brucker
Confused Man

My landlord is refusing to return my deposit over "abnormal wear and tear." Do I have any recourse?

If your landlord is blaming “normal wear and tear” for keeping your security deposit, you are not powerless. Security deposit disputes are one of the most common conflicts between renters and landlords. The good news is that state laws often give tenants clear rights, timelines, and ways to challenge improper deductions.
April 21, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My bank charged me a fee for not using my account enough. That seems so backwards, can they really penalize me for that?

You open a bank account, leave your money there, and expect the bank to be happy about it. Then a fee shows up because you did not use the account enough, and suddenly it feels like you are being punished for doing nothing at all. As frustrating as it sounds, banks can often charge inactivity or dormancy-related fees if their account agreement clearly allows it.
April 21, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My bank charged me multiple overdraft fees in one day for small purchases. Can they really stack fees on me like that?

Yes, a bank can sometimes charge multiple overdraft fees in a single day if several transactions hit your account while your balance is below zero. That’s what people mean when they say fees are “stacked.” In many cases, the bank charges one fee per item that overdraws the account, up to a daily limit set by the bank. Whether that’s allowed depends on the account agreement, federal rules, and sometimes state law or enforcement actions.
April 16, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My coworker says credit cards are a scam and refuses to use them at all. Is he hurting his financial future?

Plenty of people have a coworker, friend, or family member who insists credit cards are a total scam. It’s easy to see why they feel that way when headlines are full of sky-high interest rates, debt traps, and stories about people getting buried in payments. Credit cards absolutely can become expensive if they’re used carelessly. But refusing to use them at all can also come with tradeoffs that affect borrowing, convenience, and even consumer protections.
April 16, 2026 Miles Brucker