Improve Your Credit Score
101 Tips For Improving Your Credit Score,
Repairing your Credit And Boosting Your Credit
Rating
Credit Score Tip #1: Understand where credit
scores come from ... (continued)
One other thing you may want to understand about the
software and mathematics that goes into your credit score is
the fact that the math used by the software is based on
research and comparative mathematics. This is an
important and simple concept that can help you understand how
to boost your credit score. In simple terms,
what this means is that your credit score is in a way
calculated on the same principles as your insurance
premiums.
Your insurance company likely asks you questions about
your health, your lifestyle choices (such as whether you are a
smoker) because these bits of information can tell the
insurance company how much of a risk you are and how likely you
are to make large claims later on. This is based
on research.
Studies have shown, for example, that smokers tend to
be more prone to serious illnesses and so require more medical
attention. If you are a smoker, you may face
higher insurance premiums because of this.
Similarly, credit bureaus and lenders often look at
general patterns. Since people with too many debts
tend not to have great rates of repayment, your credit score
may suffer if you have too many debts, for
example. Understanding this can help you in
two ways:
1) It will let you see that your credit score is not a
personal reflection of how “good” or “bad” you are with
money. Rather, it is a reflection of how well
lenders and companies think you will repay your bills - based
on information gathered from studying other people.
2) It will let you see that if you want to improve
your credit score, you need to work on becoming the sort of
debtor that studies have shown tends to repay their
bills. You do not have to work hard to reinvent
yourself financially and you do not have to start making much
more money. You just need to be a reliable
lender. This realization alone should help
make credit repair far less stressful!
Credit reports are put together by credit bureaus,
which use information from client companies. It works like
this: credit bureaus have clients - such as credit card
companies and utility companies, to name just two - who provide
them with information.
Once a file is begun on you (i.e. once you open a bank
account or have bills to pay) then information about you is
stored on the record. If you are late paying a
bill, the clients call the credit bureaus and note
this. Any unpaid bills, overdue bills or
other problems with credit count as “dings” on your credit
report and affect your score.
Information such as what type of debt you have, how
much debt you have, how regularly you pay your bills on time,
and your credit accounts are all information that is used to
calculate your credit score.
Your age, sex, and income do not count towards your
credit score. The actual formula used by credit
bureaus to calculate credit scores is a well-kept secret, but
it is known that recent account activity, debts, length of
credit, unpaid accounts, and types of credit are among the
things that count the most in tabulating credit scores from a
credit report.
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Credit Score & Credit Repair
Help
Most people
spend thousands of dollars without giving much
thought to what they're buying. Write down
everything you spend for a month, cut back on
things you don't need, and start saving the
money left over or use it to reduce your debt
more quickly.
(source:
money.cnn.com)
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