CREDIT SCORING

Closing Credit Card Accounts

As part of your plan for learning how to build credit, you might wonder if you should start closing credit card accounts. After all, if you have more than five credit cards, you have more than the ideal number. (Read the post called, “How Many Credit Cards Should I Have?”)

True, credit scoring systems are happiest if you have no more than five credit cards. But before you make that call to the credit card company, be aware that closing credit card accounts can have a major impact on your credit score. Keep in mind a few basics about owning credit cards.

Fifteen percent of your credit score is derived from the age of your credit accounts, with older credit accounts giving you a better score. This part of your credit score is based on the average age of your accounts. As a result, every time you terminate older accounts, you drive down the average age of your accounts considerably and risk decreasing your credit score.

You should also consider how closing credit card accounts will affect the portion of your credit score that considers your credit card limits and balances. Your “utilization rate” is the ratio of your credit card balance against your credit limit, expressed as a percentage. If you have $800 of debts on a credit card and your available line of credit is $2,000, your utilization rate is 40 percent. Since credit-scoring bureaus reward people who have utilization rates below 30 percent, you should try to always keep your utilization rate under that threshold.

Closing credit card accounts can impact your utilization rate in a couple of ways. First, if you decide to cancel a credit card and transfer the remaining debt to another card, you may cause the utilization rate on the second card to rise sharply, which will cause your credit score to drop. Even worse than transferring a balance is leaving a balance on your card after canceling the account. If you leave a $700 balance on the canceled card, your utilization rate will suffer dramatically since the limit on the card will be $0.

So what is the plan for dealing with a bunch of credit cards? Even FICO agrees that closing credit card accounts is a bad idea. Your best bet is to keep all of them active but pay them off every month. You can even find ways to live debt-free and keep your credit cards active. A steady history of payments will demonstrate to credit-scoring bureaus your ability to manage your accounts and will eventually improve your credit score. Pay special attention to the cards with the highest limits, oldest ages, and best interest rates. Be sure to keep these cards active, maintaining a utilization rate below 30 percent.

A final note: Retail credit cards (those associated with a specific store, such as Bloomingdales) are an exception to the “keep-them-open” rule. Keeping a balance on these cards may be difficult since you probably do not need to buy something from these stores each month. Letting a retail account go inactive may not be the ideal choice, but it should not be a cause for alarm unless it causes your credit score to drop, in which case you might be able to reactivate the card with a simple phone call.

Closing credit card accounts isn’t the only thing that will hurt your credit score. If you want to learn more about how to improve your credit score, be sure to check out our free teleseminar.

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How to Build Credit Fast

People regularly ask me for tips on how to build credit fast. Among the usual—paying down credit card limits and becoming authorized users—I tell spouses to leverage each other’s credit scores.

For a variety of reasons, you might need to learn how to build credit fast. Maybe you are applying for a loan and want to secure lower interest rates. Perhaps you are a candidate for a job at a company that runs a credit check before hiring new employees. (After all, 60 percent of companies run a credit check at least some of the time.)

If you have a balance that exceeds 30 percent of the limit on a credit card, you can transfer a portion or the entire balance to your spouse’s credit card.

This is among my favorite tips for how to build credit fast because it makes a huge difference. With the credit scoring systems calculating outstanding debt as 30 percent of your credit score, your score will quickly increase if you lower your outstanding debt. You can then walk into the loan application or job interview with low personal debt and a higher-than-usual credit score.

Though you might lower your spouse’s credit score, you can quickly “buy back” the debt using your credit cards once you secure the loan or job. Of course, you will need to repay the favor if your spouse ever needs tricks for how to build credit fast!

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How to Get a Loan – A Bank Insider’s Shocking SpyCam Confession

Do you think it is fair that the very same banks who are being propped up by your taxpayer dollars – the banks who got big bailouts – are unwilling or unable to tell you how to get a loan by increasing your credit score?

I don’t, which is why I went into a major bank with a SpyCam to see whether the banks are training their bankers to tell you how to improve your credit score and qualify for a loan.

And guess what? After the government unilaterally decided to give the banks a loan using your money, the banks won’t tell you how to improve your credit score so you can qualify for a loan.

The government forced us to give them a loan, and now they won’t tell us how to get a loan. Does that seem fair?

They should tell us:

Watch this video and let me know. Do you think it is fair that the banker hasn’t been trained about credit scores and how to get a loan?

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“Buy Now Pay Later No Credit Check

by Philip Tirone

Are the buy now pay later no credit check offers good for your credit score?

Probably not.

As you learn how to build credit, you should consider that certain credit types of credit, including buy now pay later no credit check offers, will probably hurt your credit score.

You can probably surmise that buy now pay later no credit check offers usually come with Goliath-sized interest rates. People who apply for these loans are often risky borrowers who are unlikely to repay their loans, so creditors who offer buy now pay later no credit check loans know that many of their customers will default once the grace period expires. To make these loans worthwhile, creditors attach high interest rates. The people who do repay their loans pay an arm and a leg in interest to compensate the creditors for the cost of those who default.

Aside from the high interest rates, buy now pay later no credit check offers are probably a bad idea for another reason. The creditor might not check your credit before granting you a loan, but the creditor will most certainly report the buy now pay later no credit check offer to the credit-scoring bureaus. And credit scoring systems frown upon any buy now pay later loans. These loans suggest that the borrower is not currently able to meet the financial obligations of the loan, and this gives the credit-scoring bureaus reason to believe that you are a credit risk.

One of the rules of how to build credit is that you should never do anything that suggests you are experiencing financial strain. Even if you plan to repay the loan in a timely manner, the buy now pay later no credit check loan tells the credit-scoring bureaus that you are in such a financial bind that you will agree to sky-high interest rates. A person whose finances are stable probably would not agree to high interest rates, so credit-scoring bureaus will lower your credit score if you apply for these loans.

One more reason to steer clear of buy now pay later no credit check offers: These loans often result in a high utilization rate. Remember that your utilization rate is the balance you have on a loan or credit card as compared to the limit. The lower your utilization rate, the better your credit score. Because the balance on these loans often does not decrease for many months (remember, you will pay later), your utilization rate stays high until you start paying.

Though the buy now pay later no credit check offers might be tempting, if you really want to take the steps and learn how to improve your credit score, you should turn your back on these offers.

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