Your credit score affects everything, from where you live to the kind of car you drive. What you do not know about information in your credit report can hurt you.
Your Credit Score
A credit score is a three-digit number that lenders use to predict how likely it is that you will make timely payments on your bills and other obligations. Your credit score can affect whether you are able to rent an apartment. It also can affect how much of a deposit you will have to pay to get your telephone and utilities turned on once you move in. Financial institutions use your score to determine:
- whether to give you a loan
- how much to loan you
- how much they should charge you for borrowing that money
Generally speaking, a higher credit score means that you are more likely to pay lower interest rates on new credit and that you are able to obtain a loan. Since your credit score affects so many aspects of your life, it is important to periodically check your credit report to make sure everything is accurate and to be aware of items that might be negatively impacting your credit score.
Lenders and other institutions purchase your credit score from three primary credit bureaus:
- Experian
- Equifax
Credit scores generally range from 300 to 850, and most lenders consider scores above 700 to be a sign of good financial fitness. Scores below 600, however, indicate a higher risk to lenders. As a result, people with such scores often pay higher interest rates and sometimes are unable to obtain loans or credit.
For a fee, you can obtain your credit score through each individual credit bureau. You also can obtain your credit report through other sources like the Annual Credit Report Service, which allows you to obtain one free report per year from each credit reporting agency, and myFICO, the Web site for the Fair Isaac Corporation, which developed the standard credit scoring system (also known as the FICO score).
Your Credit Report
Aside from your name, address, Social Security number, employment history, and other basic information, you are also likely to find the following information in your credit report.
- the amount past due on delinquent accounts
- how long accounts have been overdue
- how many overdue accounts are in your name
- adverse public records like bankruptcies, foreclosures, and liens
- the number of accounts you have paid as agreed and on time
- how much you owe on open accounts
- the balances you owe on specific account types
- the number of accounts you have with balances
- the amount of credit you are using compared to the credit limits imposed on your accounts
- the amount of money you owe on any installment loans
- how many accounts you have recently opened
- how long they have been open
- whether you have good credit history following any payment problems on your accounts
- how long your accounts have been open
- the amount of time specific types of accounts have been open
- the amount of time that has passed since any activity on those accounts
- the number of credit cards you have
- the number of retail accounts you have
- mortgages
- consumer finance accounts
- installment loans in your name
- each account you have with them
- when you opened the accounts
- the credit limit or loan amount
- the account balances
- payment history on each account
Additional Resources
A "cashless exercise" is the exercise of an option by the option holder in a manner...
People who are interested in working from home often look to the Internet for an...