Scott,
I had a card that had a fixed rate of 5% on my
            balance. I closed the account years ago when I started taking
            control of my debt. Since this was the lowest rate of the cards I
            had, I was only paying the minimum and concentrating instead on
            paying off other high interest credit. I received a notice with one
            of my invoices that they would be increasing the rate to 20% and
            that I basically didn't have a choice in the matter (fine print). I 
transferred the balance over to other cards that would have a lower
            APR than the 20% they would be imposing; however, this severely
            limited my available credit for emergency purposes.
Just wanted to know if it is legal for them to increase the rate on
            a closed account and if there was any other option for me to
            consider. Obviously, this would be information for any future similar
            situations. Thanks!
Mike

Mike,
Do you have the original paperwork that gave you the
            fixed rate of 5%? I truly hope so because it's that documentation
            that could ultimately help you keep that rate. The only problem is
            that you did transfer the balance. But you did so because you thought
            they wouldn't keep the rate at what they promised.
            
            I see this happen frequently. That's why I ALWAYS keep copies of the
            letter, terms, conditions, etc. in my files for just such a
            situation. I even photocopy applications!
            
            If this happened to me, and I found evidence that they couldn't
            raise the rate, then I might even contact a lawyer and see what
            could be done. I would also contact the Federal Trade Commission and
            other consumer groups to see if they could help me make the bank
            honor their agreement.
            
            For the future...get everything in writing and keep it in a file!
            
            Good luck and please let me know what happens.
            Scott