|
Top Credit Links
Most people know that credit scores
determine what and how much you can borrow from
lenders, but very few are actually knowledgeable
about how credit scores are calculated. When you
attempt to borrow money from a financial
institution or to obtain a credit card, the
financial companies retrieve a copy of your credit
report, which contains a score that qualifies (or
disqualifies) you for the loan or line of credit.
Credit scores
range from 340 to 850, and are used to determine
the risk lenders take on when they give you money
or credit. An individual with a credit score of
480 will pose a much larger risk to the lender
than an individual with a credit score of 700. If
you don’t know your credit score, it might be a
good idea to find out.
The three credit
bureaus - Equifax, Transunion and Experian – use
a special type of software that uses the
information in your credit report to generate a
numerical score. Credit scores are sometimes
called “FICO scores” because the first credit
score software was produced and distributed by
Fair Isaac Corporation—FICO.
Credit scores are
calculated using the following information:
35% Payment
History
30% Amount Owed
15% Length of Credit History
10% Types of Credit Utilized
10% New Credit Obtained
Payment
History
Your payment
history encompasses all of your past credit
accounts – including loans, mortgages, financing
and lines of credit. It will include the accounts
that you have “paid as agreed”; negative
accounts and collections; and delinquent accounts.
Delinquent accounts will show how many accounts
are past due, the amount of time that the account
has been past due and how much time has elapsed
since you’ve had a past due payment.
Amount Owed
The part that
includes the amounts you owe will include how
frequently you pay down your credit, how much of
your revolving credit lines you've used, and the
total number of zero-balance accounts. This is
used to determine how frequently you pay off your
debts and how much you continue to accrue as time
goes on.
Length of
Credit History
Your credit score
will also reflect how long your credit report has
been tracked and how long it has been since
you’ve last opened an account. The longer your
credit report is tracked, the higher your credit
score will be as along as you continue to make
payments and to avoid collections.
Types of
Credit Utilized
There are many
more types of credit than just credit cards. Your
credit history encompasses mortgages, auto loans,
business loans and all types of financing. When
you’ve used several different types of credit
– rather than just revolving credit, such as a
credit card – your credit score will be higher.
New Credit
Obtained
New credit refers
to accounts that you have opened or paid off
within the last six months. New credit doesn’t
hold as much weight as older accounts because
you’ve had less time to pay (or not pay).
Credit scores are
generated by all three credit bureaus, and you
might have three very different credit scores. The
three bureaus use different ways of calculating
credit scores, and one bureau might have more
information than another. It is up to your lenders
to report positive or negative credit, and if they
report it to only one company, then it will not
show up elsewhere.
Copyright Ed
Vegliante. Free online reprints of this article
are allowed provided the resource box remains
intact with a live link back to http://www.credit-card-surplus.com
.
Ed Vegliante runs the website http://www.Credit-Card-Surplus.com
, a well organized credit card directory enabling
the consumer to compare and apply for a variety of
credit card offers. Find links to secure online Credit
Card Applications.
Get a 3 in 1
credit report
Order a 3-BUREAU CREDIT REPORT from CreditReporting.com for $34.90.
SEE what's in your report TODAY to insure 100%
accuracy TOMORROW!
|