Posted on November - 11 - 2011
If you plan on brandishing that black diamond engagement ring, popping the question, buying a home, and starting a family anytime this century you’re going to need good credit. Or, if you just need to take out a loan for your small business, this will require you having at least a 700 credit score, if not higher. No one’s going to lend money to someone with bad credit, nor is any real estate agent going to give you the time of day. The age of predatory lending is over; the dawn of financial responsibility is upon us. Here are some ways to beef up your credit score.
Make regular credit card payments. If you’re frequently late on making payments on your credit card, it’s going to adversely affect your credit score. If you can’t afford to pay off what you spend, you shouldn’t be using it. Period. And, if possible, have your available credit lowered. As it ridic
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Posted on October - 26 - 2010
The average Joe and Jane with excellent credit has a sky-high Credit Karma credit score of 720 or higher. Lenders and issuers treat these consumers as the cream of the crop—premium rates, access to best financing options and offers, approval on almost all credit cards, and extra leverage when negotiating terms.
Joe and Jane are the best kind of customers, so lenders and issuers will go extra lengths to get and keep their business. An excellent credit score reflects a very healthy credit report, which may be checked by potential employers, landlords, utility providers, cell phone providers, and more.
32% of Credit Karma consumers fall in the excellent credit range of 720 and above, and less than one percent have a credit score above 800. If you fit this credit profile, congratulations! You’ve achieved elite credit-score status, so you must be credit-conscious, vigilant, and alert to keep it that way.
Excellent credit consumers can lose their top-notch credit due to careless mistakes. The
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Posted on July - 28 - 2010
The economy is driven by consumers and their buying power is enhanced through lines of credit available to them. Banks and other financial institutions whose business is to offer lines of credit and loans, need an effective system to evaluate the creditworthiness of loan applicants. For this purpose, credit scores were introduced. An excellent credit score almost guarantees that you will be favorably considered for a loan by any financial institution. The question that often keeps popping up all the time is, ‘What is an excellent credit score?’. In this article I’ll provide an estimate of what constitutes an excellent credit score rating.
About Credit Scores
In most countries, including the USA, the system used to make an objective evaluation of creditworthiness and debt repaying ability of a loan applicant, is the usage of a credit score system. Full Post…
Posted on July - 14 - 2010
[Disclaimer: Reading this post will not automatically improve your credit score—we aren’t miracle workers here. But reading this post will arm you with the knowledge it takes to manage your credit score responsibly. The rest is up to you.]
You may have heard the bad news: Millions of Americans are seeing their credit score sink to new lows. The Associated Press reports that 25.5% of consumers, about 43.4 million, have a credit score of 599 below. These consumers are dubbed “poor credit” borrowers, seen as high-risk borrowers who will find it increasingly difficult to borrow credit.
But it isn’t hopeless for those 43.4 million consumers– or you—to build a great credit score.
Oftentimes, many consumers find it difficult to improve their credit because they don’t quite know how credit scores work in the first place. Just browse the
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Posted on July - 10 - 2010
It’s a love-hate relationship. When debt crops up on your credit report, good debt management can contribute to a great credit score… or mishandled debt can also damage your credit score.
If you are a credit-savvy consumer, you know that total debt is one of the key financial components that go into calculating your credit score. While debt isn’t necessary to a good credit score, having credit is necessary, and borrowing any kind of credit–whether its a credit card or a mortgage–can potentially accumulate debt. Ultimately, it is how you deal with your debt that lenders consider as a reflection of your creditworthiness.
Here are a few tidbits on the love-hate relationship of your debt and your credit score.
- More debt isn’t always a bad thing. Not kidding. Good credit habits include minimizing revolving debt, such as credit card bills that you should pay off each month, while balancing installment debt, such as student loans or mortgages that keep you in debt for years. Also, havin
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