Paulie
Diamond Member
- May 19, 2007
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Almost all of what you said is totally false. Those 2 situations you mention don't take into account how much available revolving credit each person has. You can't just say someone has $5k in credit card debt and that automatically should make their score lower.. If they have, say, $30k in available credit then that means their utilization rate is only 17%, which FICO sees as favorable.Your credit score is basically a measure of two things...
1) Your ability and history of paying debt back.
2) Your willingness to take on debt.
A person who makes $150k a year, has no credit card debt..paid off his/her vehicle early and makes double payments on their home will actually have a lower rating than someone who makes $100k, has $5000 in CC debt and only pays minimums, gets a new car every few years and never pays early or more than payment - and never pays early on mortgage - in fact has a 2nd mortgage. But awlays-always makes payments.
The 2nd person is more desirable by creditors because they use their services more and regulary recharge their debts - thus always paying higher interests.
You were wrong about the 2 factors too. Average age of accounts is one of the factors in the algorithm. The longer you've had credit, the more favorable it is. In some situations that can even outweigh a potential bad stretch of payment history you may have had, in comparison to someone else who's had immaculate credit but only for a couple years of total history.
Also, paying your card balance off every month as opposed to carrying debt and paying interest on it does not hurt you. The only factor in credit card debt is what your utilization rate is. No one knows for sure what the actual percentage is that it needs to be at or under, but it's pretty widely accepted that 20% or less utilization is healthy for your credit score.
I don't understand why people don't know this considering how important it is. Any credit help website will tell you all this. I gained 200 points in my credit score in exactly a year from this month taking into account all of these factors. If you actually know what REALLY affects your score it's pretty easy to make it increase.