Credit Scoring:
How is It Done? What Matters Most?
1. Length of Credit History 15%
If you are
just trying to establish a credit record, you have few options to
improve your score, since how long your credit accounts have been
established is what counts. Most often, the longer the credit
history the better your credit score can be. However this only makes
up 15% of your overall score. So even young people, students and
others with short histories can still have high credit scores as
long as the other factors show positive results. Parents should take
note that establishing a credit record for your children before they
go out on their own could give them a leg up when they apply for
credit later.
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2. Acquiring New Credit 10%
Even though this
category makes up only about 10% of the total score, applying for
too much new credit is probably one of the easiest ways for people
to inadvertently harm their credit score. Just look at how many
credit card offers you get via the Internet and in the mail. Here,
the FICO model looks at how many new accounts you have established,
how long it has been since you opened a new account and how many
recent requests for your credit have been made by credit reporting
agencies. Fair Isaac says that if you request your credit report
from one of the agencies this does not count since it is a
"consumer-initiated inquiry," Until recently, your score would have
gone down if you made a number of applications for credit cards or
mortgages within a short period of time-even if all you were doing
was shopping around for the lowest rate or best overall deal. Now,
Fair Isaac claims that they lump together inquiries made within a
short period of time as one inquiry. So if you are shopping around,
make your inquiries all within a few days if you can. (Note: this
only applies to auto or mortgage loan inquiries)
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3. Types of Credit
10%
This factor takes into account your mix of
installment loans, mortgages, retail accounts, credit cards and
finance company accounts. Fair Isaac, however, is a little vague
about how it weights your mix of account types. It does not indicate
that this factor may be given less weight if the company has full
information about your other four factors. Its not a good idea to
try and open different types of accounts just to try and make this
factor better. It will likely reduce your score in other areas. You
should never open accounts you don’t intend to use anyway, so when
you are asked to open an account to get that stuffed animal remember
how it can affect your score.
When the credit bureaus
deliver your FICO score to your lender, the score is also
accompanied by what are called "reason codes." These explain what
factors lowered you score. For example, one reason is that your code
"number of accounts with delinquency." For you, the reason codes
could be very important, since they could indicate the best ways to
improve your scores.
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4. Previous Credit
Performance (Payment History) 35%
Lenders want to know
how you have handled your accounts in the past. Such accounts as
credit cards, retail store accounts, installment loans, finance
company accounts and mortgage loans.
The things lenders look
for specifically are:
-
How late your payments were 30-60-90
days. According to Fair Isaac. “A 30 day late payment made just
a month ago will count more than a 90 day late payment from five
years ago.”
-
How much was owed at the time of delinquency
and are there outstanding balances.
-
Collection items and
Public records. Such as judgments, bankruptcies, suits, liens and
wage attachments. Most of these are considered quite serious,
although older items will affect the score less than the most recent
ones.
-
The amount of negative items as compared to your
total amount of available credit. For instance 5 accounts showing 3
late payments is much worse than 10 accounts showing 4 late
payments. One of the biggest sub factors is how many accounts show
no late payments. If you have a number of accounts and most show no
late payments, your over all credit score will increase
substantially.
-
Your payment history is just one piece of the
score calculation, although it can be very important.
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5. The Amount and Type of Outstanding Debt: (Amounts
Owed) 30%
The lenders ask them selves can the borrower
pay me and still afford to pay their other bills? While owing a
lot of money on many accounts might indicate that you are
overextended, your FICO score will not necessarily be harmed by
large outstanding amounts. Paying off your credit cards in full
every month does not mean that they won’t show a balance on your
report. What is more important is how many accounts have balances
and how much of the total credit line is being used on credit cards
and other "revolving credit" accounts. In an attempt to improve
their credit scores, people sometimes make the mistake of closing
down credit cards accounts where they have small balances and
consolidating their debt under one credit card. If you have a credit
card with a very small balance and no late pays. Even though the
balance is low, this still looks very good as it shows that you are
able to manage your credit responsibly and this reflects positively
on your credit score. If you should close the accounts and
consolidate all the debt on one card that you nearly max out, this
can actually worsen your score since the percentage of your lines of
credit that is still owed would actually go up.
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