<div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr">R' Akiva Miller wrote:<div>"<span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);white-space:pre-wrap">It seems to me that many of the questions being raised about credit cards</span></div><pre style="white-space:pre-wrap;color:rgb(0,0,0)">are not really new at all, and are easily compared to older questions
regarding payment by check. For example, one of my seforim points to a
difference between the common practice in Israel and in the US: In Israel,
many merchants will accept a third-party check as payment, and therefore a
paycheck can be considered as cash (in terms of the employer's mitzva to
pay with cash). But in the US such checks are accepted far more rarely, and
so it is not considered cash. (Personally, I'm not sure if I *ever* "spent"
a paycheck in this manner, except for some supermarkets that allowed it
*IF* I would pre-register and fill out a few forms and such beforehand.)"</pre><pre style="white-space:pre-wrap;color:rgb(0,0,0)">I think credit cards payments are different for 1 simple reason. When you get a check you have a physical object on your hand that you can take to the store and uses in lieu of cash. This is why the poskim consider it cash. When you get a credit card payment you have nothing tangible to take to the store. You may have money in the bank but you have no tangible way of spending it. Now, if you have a debit card that can be used to spend that money it might be different, but at least in Israel, people don't have debit cards because credit cards are sort of debit cards (not for now). So even though the money is in the bank you can't directly spend that money.</pre></div></div>