Credit / Tips for Boosting your Credit
If you're thinking about
buying a house or a car, your credit score is a very important
number.
The interest rate you'll pay for the money
you borrow
will be determined, in large part, by this three-digit number
that's generated from the information in your credit report.
Most lenders have carved-in-stone rules
about handing out the best terms, and those rules almost always
place a major emphasis on your credit score. If their best
rates are offered to borrowers with a score of 700 or higher
and yours is a 698, those two points could cost you thousands
of dollars.
According to www.myfico.com
, the consumer Web site of the Fair Isaac Corp. that created
the FICO score (the most commonly used credit score), the
interest rate difference between those two scores is one-half
percentage point.
On a $165,000 30-year fixed rate
mortgage, that half point could cost you more than $19,000
in interest charges, assuming 6 percent is the lowest rate
available (see Bankrate's calculators
). Fall below a 675 and the rate goes up another 1.2 percent.
Keep in mind that these are averages.
Most lenders today practice tiered pricing, with interest
rates rising as scores go down. Each lender chooses its own
"break points" between tiers. Lender A may bump
up the interest rate if a score falls below 700, while Lender
B doesn't charge higher rates until the score is 690 or below.
So if you stick with one lender, and that lender's break point
is 700, raising your score from 698 to 701 can be vital.
This underscores the importance of not
only doing all you can to improve your score, but shopping
thoroughly when looking for a mortgage. From the perspective
of a mortgage broker, who can choose among a sea many lenders,
there are no sharp break points. Consumers should do what
a good broker does -- look for a lender that offers the best
rate for a specific score.
But that's jumping ahead of ourselves.
First things first: You can take steps to improve your credit
score. The number of variables that play into an individual
score make it impossible to say that one particular action
will increase a given score by a certain number of points.
But there are some good guidelines.
"The mantra for getting a great score
is pay your bills on time, keep account balances low, and
take out new credit only when you need it," says Craig
Watts, consumer affairs manager for Fair Isaac Corp.
"People who do that faithfully have
very high scores. It usually means you're being conservative
and cautious about credit. It's not a toy and it shouldn't
be a hobby."
Speedy upgrade
That's good advice, to be sure, but these actions take a long
time. What if you're house hunting and you just need a few
extra points to bump you over the line to the great rates?
Start by pulling your credit
report and your credit score to see where you are. To
get an estimate of your credit score, check out our Credit
Score Estimator. If your score is above a 720, you're
golden. Improving your score from a 720 to a 740 won't get
you better terms.
What you're looking for on your report
are factors that could be affecting your score. Look for errors
in the report, such as accounts that aren't yours, late payments
that were actually paid on time, debts you paid off that are
shown as outstanding, or old debts that shouldn't be reported
any longer (negatives are supposed to be deleted after seven
years, with the exception of bankruptcies, which can stay
for as long as 10 years).
After repairing errors, the fastest route
to a better score is paying down balances on credit cards,
says Watts and David Herpers, chief marketing officer for
Atlanta-based Amerisave Mortgage Corp.
"There's really no silver bullet,
but I would think that over 60 days, it's possible to increase
your score 20 points by paying down your credit lines,"
Herpers says.
Had a few late payments in your past?
If you find yourself in some financial difficulties, you can
protect your score by making sure your payments don't go 60
days past due, Herpers says. "Some lenders don't report
30 days past due, but they all report 60 days past due."
Even if you've paid your bills late in
the past, you can improve your credit score by paying every
bill on time from now on, says John Ventura, a consumer law
attorney and author of "The Credit Repair Kit."
"Forget about grace periods,"
he says. "If you want to have a really good record with
the credit agencies, pay your debt before it's due and keep
your balances low."
A big no-no
One thing you shouldn't do if you're just trying to boost
your score is close unused accounts, Watts says.
"If someone tells you to close unused
accounts to improve your score, they're pulling your leg,"
he says. "It won't help you and it can hurt you."
Closing unused accounts without paying
down your debt changes your utilization ratio, which is the
amount of your total debt divided by your total available
credit.
"You appear closer to maxing out
your accounts," he says. "That's why your score
can drop. It doesn't mean people shouldn't close them, but
don't close them to improve your score."
If you do cut up cards, though, leave
the oldest one open, says Steve Rhode, former president of
Myvesta.org
, a national nonprofit financial crisis center.
The length of your credit history is another
factor in your score. If you close the account of the credit
card you got when you were a freshman in college and leave
open the ones you just got within the last couple years, it
makes you look like a much newer borrower.
"Keep a couple of the oldest open;
I don't care what the interest rate is," he says. "Creditors
don't care what the rate is."
Working with credit card balances
Another strategy for bringing up your score: Transfer balances
from a card that's close to being maxed out to other cards
to even out your usage, says David Chung, interim president
and vice president of business development for Maryland-based
CreditXpert Inc., which provides credit tools to lenders.
Or just spread out your charges between a few cards.
"Try to get the usage on all of them
at 20 to 30 percent instead of a bunch at zero and one at
80 percent," Chung says. "You're not spending less,
you're just shifting it around to different cards."
It could work, Watts from FICO says. "Transferring
the balance to a card with a lower utilization could help,"
he says, "but it's much better to actually pay down the
debt if you have the cash kicking around."
If you're really into finessing the system,
check your credit report to see what day of the month your
creditors send updates on payments to the credit bureaus,
Chung says. They're rarely on the same cycle as your payment
due date. That's why you can pay off your card every month
and your credit report will show you carrying a balance. Then,
make your payments several days before the reporting date.
All of these strategies generally take
at least 30 days because lenders don't report payments more
than once a month.
Rapid rescoring
If you're in the throes of qualifying for a mortgage and need
a score boost in a hurry, you can speed the process along
with rapid rescoring. If you've got legitimate negative information
on your credit report, such as late payments or accounts in
collections, you're out of luck. But the process of rapid
rescoring can help increase your score within a few days by
correcting errors or paying off account balances.
You can't do this one yourself; you'll
need a lender who is a customer of a rapid rescoring service.
Generally, the service will run roughly $50 for every account
on your credit report that needs to be addressed, but it could
save you thousands on your loan.
If a consumer can find a lender who is
a customer of a rapid rescoring service, new information can
be posted within 72 hours, Watts says.
Some nifty online tools are available
to find out which strategies could have the most impact on
your score. Fair Isaac's www.myfico.com
site offers a credit score simulator when you purchase a credit
score. It will show you how paying down your account balances
-- or not paying any of your bills on time this month -- would
affect your score.
CreditXpert's "What-If" simulator
lets you play with several variables, such as buying a car,
paying off a student loan and opening a department store account,
all at the same time. They don't sell the simulator directly
to consumers, though. You can get a list of places that do
sell it on the consumer page of its Web
site.
The bottom line, the experts say, is that
you're not powerless when it comes to your credit score.
"There are a lot of things you can
do to improve your score," Chung says. "You need
to understand what your credit is like now and what's influencing
your score today. Then you can take an objective look at the
different options available."
|