I'm starting to look for a used car because I'll probably need one soon, but my credit is not great shape. I keep seeing very different answers online, so I'm not sure what actually realistic. Some people say you can still get approved if your income is steady, while others say most banks just reject applications with bad credit. I also understand the interest rates probably won't be great either way. I'm just trying to figure out if approval is actually realistic or if most people in this situation end up needing a co-singer or just saving up instead. For anyone who's been through this recently, what happened when you tried?
u/Alone_Payment_5925
I've been trying to understand how people are managing multiple TikTok accounts at scale these days without constantly running into restrictions, instability, or account related issues. The platform seems a lot stricter now, and even small things like device consistency, login behavior, or how accounts are accessed can make a difference. From what I've observed, most setup seems to focus on keeping accounts properly separated and maintaining consistent environments for each profile rather frequently switching between them. What I'm really curious about is how this works in real workflows. Once you start managing multiple accounts, how do you keep everything organized and avoid confusion or overlap between them? And over the long term, what practices have actually helped you maintain account stability and reduce issues?