Welcome to the Credit Tips Blog !

Keeping good credit can make all the difference in how you live your life. Good credit can get you a new house, a new car, or a business loan. Bad credit can make it impossible to get anything you want. But many people don't know many of the requirements for maintaining good credit. Furthermore, many people have special credit situations that require some analysis to figure out what exactly to do. The purpose of this blog is to provide some answera and some resources for further exploration.


When your Credit Score Become Important?

Filed Under (Credit) by admin on 11-03-2008

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credit score
Cornie Herring asked:


Have you ever wonder why your online application for credit can be approved in 60 seconds? Or get pre-qualified auto loan for a car without asking you how much is your income? Or why your interest rates on loans are different from the interest rates of your friends or neighbors?

Your credit scoring is the factor that affect all the above. It is your responsibility to main a good credit score. You will need to use it to get you a best available rate when come to apply for credit.

What is Credit Score?

Most of time credit score is refer as FICO score (Fair Isaac Corporation), it is a number based on the information in your credit file that shows how likely you are to pay a loan back on time, the higher your score, the less risky you are. You credit score is derived from three major credit bureaus: Exprian, Equifax and TransUnion. These 3 major credit bureaus will compile your credit report based on the information provided by the companies that gave your credit in the past. Based on the information such as your payment history, the length of your credit history and the type of credit your have and the amounts owed, the credit bureaus will generate your credit report. And based on your credit report, a number or scores will be assigned to you; this number will be range from 300 to 850. This magic number is your credit score, the higher the number the better you are.

When Your Credit Score Count?

Your credit score will play an important part when comes to applying loans or other credits, it may save you a significant of interest if you are have good credit score. When you apply for mortgage, car loan, business loan or credit card, the lender or credit company will assess how risky you are as a potential borrower, the higher your score, the less risk you pose to the lender and the more likely you will get a better interest rate for application.

You will be offered at a relatively low rate if your credit score is above 700 and if your credit score is above 760, you will get the best available rates because you are the lowest risk borrower at this high of credit score. You loan will be approved with high loan rates if your credit score is below 600, and if your credit score is really bad, you may be not be able to borrow at all.

Maintain High Credit Score

Now you know how important your credit score is and when it becomes important and you can use it as a tool to save cash. Hence, it is important for you to maintain your credit score at high level. Things that you can do to increase your credit score include:



Pay your bills on time

Keep balances low on credit cards

Don’t open a number of new credit cards that you don’t need

Have credit cards - but manage them responsibly



In Summary

Credit score is not just a number, it is a tool that you can control and use to save cash. It will become important whenever you need credits and it is an important factor to be considered by any financial organization before they approve your credit application. Hence, keep your credit score all time high.



Want to Improve your Credit Score – Here are Five Ways

Filed Under (Credit) by admin on 04-02-2008

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credit score
Dewey Kearney asked:


OK. So you’ve ordered your credit report and seen your credit score. Now you see the cold, hard truth – it’s downright ugly and you wonder if you can really salvage your credit and ever get a decent interest rate on a home or car loan – forget about credit cards!

Take heart! With a few steps and a plan of attack you can improve your credit score and start on the path to recovery. Corporate trainer and credit counselor Bruce McClary of Richmond, VA offers 5 ways to boost your credit score.

Get It Right

Accuracy is the first thing to look at and is the fastest way to boost your credit score. Find and fix any mistakes that could be pulling your score down. Credit scores are based on the information contained in your credit reports. If you are one of those who haven’t seen your credit report in several years, make sure you order a copy of all three reports because each will be different.

Pay Your Bills On Time

Paying your bills on time helps you build and maintain a healthy payment history. Paying your bills on time is the largest factor in determining your credit score (at 35%). This is the best way to rebuild damaged credit. If you want noticeable results try paying your bills on time for 12 months. It will make a difference. If you don’t have a track record that goes back years and years but only a few months then you can get your score back within that 12-month period. If your history goes back further it could take longer but this is the biggest factor.

You can expect information about past-due payments to stay on your report for up to seven years. Your score can still improve as long as you make regular on-time payments.

Get Back – You Are Too Close To The Edge

If you think you are doing everything right, the next thing is to look at the amount of your outstanding credit card debt and your debt-to-credit ratio. If you reduce these debts it can make a significant difference, especially if you are near your credit limit on any of these cards.

You never want to be maxed out and the ideal limit is 35% to 40%. Keeping your debt spread out is better for your score than having all your eggs in one basket.

Next, focus on the amount of outstanding debt – this is 30% of your score. Put together the outstanding debt and payment history account for 65% of your credit score. Pay off your debt rather than move it around. A lot of people like to play the balance transfer balance game. Closing an account and transferring that amount means that you’re increasing your debt ratio.

Here’s a tip: Take the smallest balance and try to pay it off first, while making minimum payments on the others.Then when that balance is paid off take the next smallest one and double up on it, etc. etc. This gives you reachable goals, and psychologically it’s encouraging because you see yourself actually paying OFF the debts.

Commit For The Long Run

15% of your score is determined by how long you have had the credit relationship. This may sound silly, but don’t close any accounts if you plan to shop for a mortgage or other type of loan where you will need a good score. Opening new cards and closing old ones will negatively impact your credit score in the short run.

You want to have a couple of credit cards to develop a credit history, but adding more credit card debt can be dangerous. It’s better to limit your credit cards to two, keep the balances low and pay them off quickly. Be careful using them and equally important is having a savings account to fall back on.

Look Before You Leap

When you apply for a loan or a credit card, lenders pull your credit. These inquiries put a temporary dent in your credit score. The best way is to start your loan search by shopping and comparing rates rather than applying for a loan and deciding later.

Also it is best to do all your shopping within a month’s time. This can be very important. Mortgage and auto loans are counted as one inquiry if they fall within a 45-day period in the FICO scoring.

Inquiries have the least impact on overall score. Inquiries, types of credit and the number of loans play into the final figuring of your score.

Additional note though: If your credit score is significantly bad – 585 or below – don’t apply for multiple car loans or mortgage loans “shopping the rate.”Each credit pull will temporarily take your score lower, and lenders dealing with low credit scores typically charge around the same interest rate so shopping all around town and having your credit pulled is really not going to help you in the long run.

Having a bad credit score does not have to ruin your life. Make a plan to pay off your debts and stick with it! Within 12 to 18 months you’ll be surprised at how much you can significantly increase your credit score with good payment history and lowering your overall debt vs. income ratio!