XS2MAN makes a good point. If you want to argue the toss over a small amount which you accept likely was caused whilst in your possession then it might be sensible to just pay it off. You can, of course stand by your principles and it is perfectly reasonable to argue that they could have obtained a cheaper cost than what they are charging but it's not always about that. As long as that figure is in the ballpark figure of what someone else might charge to fix the problem then it's likely to be reasonable.
I'm not aware of RCI issuing adverse entries on your credit file but problems can and do arise when the correspondence goes cold after a while and then RCI decide to do something that affects you, and you don't realise until it's too late.
Probably best to take a pragmatic view on this, but that's up to you.
I'm not aware of RCI issuing adverse entries on your credit file but problems can and do arise when the correspondence goes cold after a while and then RCI decide to do something that affects you, and you don't realise until it's too late.
Probably best to take a pragmatic view on this, but that's up to you.
Comment