Improve Your Credit Score
101 Tips For Improving Your Credit Score,
Repairing your Credit And Boosting Your Credit
Rating
Your Credit Score - The Basics
Before you start boosting your credit score, you need
to know the basics. You need to know what a credit
score is, how it is developed, and why it is important to you
in your everyday life.
Lenders certainly know what sort of information they
can get from a credit score, but knowing this information
yourself can help you better see how your everyday financial
decisions impact the financial picture lenders get of you
through your credit score. A few simple tips are
all you need to know to understand the basic principles:
Credit Score Tip #1: Understand where credit scores
come from.
If you are going to improve your credit score, then
logic has it that you must understand what your credit score is
and how it works. Without this information, you
won’t be able to very effectively improve your score because
you won’t understand how the things you do in daily life affect
your score.
If you don’t understand how your credit score works,
you will also be at the mercy of any company that tries to tell
you how you can improve your score - on their terms and at
their price.
In general, your credit score is a number that lets
lenders know how much of a credit risk you are.
The credit score is a number, usually between 300 and 850, that
lets lenders know how well you are paying off your debts and
how much of a credit risk you are.
In general, the higher your credit score, the better
credit risk you make and the more likely you are to be given
credit at great rates. Scores in the low 600s and
below will often give you trouble in finding credit, while
scores of 720 and above will generally give you the best
interest rates out there. However, credit
scores are a lot like GPAs or SAT scores from college days -
while they give others a quick snapshot of how you are doing,
they are interpreted by people in different
ways. Some lenders put more emphasis on
credit scores than others.
Some lenders will work with you if you have credit
scores in the 600s, while others offer their best rates only to
those creditors with very high scores indeed. Some lenders will
look at your entire credit report while others will accept or
reject your loan application based solely on your credit
score.
The credit score is based on your credit report, which
contains a history of your past debts and repayments. Credit
bureaus use computers and mathematical calculations to arrive
at a credit score from the information contained in your credit
report.
Each credit bureau uses different methods to do this
(which is why you will have different scores with different
companies) but most credit bureaus use the FICO system. FICO is
an acronym for the credit score calculating software offered by
Fair Isaac Corporation company. This is by far the
most used software since the Fair Isaac Corporation developed
the credit score model used by many in the financial industry
and is still considered one of the leaders in the field.
In fact, credit scores are sometimes called FICO
scores or FICO ratings, although it is important to understand
that your score may be tabulated using different
software.
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Credit Score & Credit Repair
Help
Don't use a
credit card to pay for things you consume
quickly, such as meals and vacations, if you
can't afford to pay off your monthly bill in
full in a month or two. There's no faster way
to fall into debt. Instead, put aside some cash
each month for these items so you can pay the
bill in full. If there's something you really
want but it's expensive, save for it over a
period of weeks or months before charging it so
that you can pay the balance when it's due and
avoid interest
charges.
(source:
money.cnn.com)
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