WILL DEBT
CONSOLIDATION INFLUENCE MY CREDIT HISTORY?
"Contrary
to what you might have heard, credit counseling probably won't hurt
your credit score. It used to, but about three years ago Fair Isaac
discovered that people in debt-repayment plans were no more likely
to default or go bankrupt than other consumers."Today the FACE
score ignores any and all references in a credit report to credit
counseling or debt management programs,"- Watts said.Those
references to credit counseling, by the way, are typically removed
from a credit report after a consumer has successfully completed
a repayment plan. That means there's no lasting reminder on your
credit history..."
Beef
up your credit score in 5 steps
We know more than ever about how credit scores are calculated. Learn
how to cleanup your record, polish it to a new gleam and reap the
financial rewards.
By
Liz Pulliam Weston (msn.com)
So you've had
a few problems getting the bills paid lately, and you-re wondering
what you can do to repair the damage. The fix is in.
You-ve got plenty
of company. There are more than 30 million people in the United
States with credit blemishes severe enough (score under 620) to
make obtaining loans and credit cards with reasonable terms difficult.
Or maybe your
credit is OK, but you'd like to make it better. After all, the better
your credit, the lower the interest rates you can score on mortgages,
car loans and credit cards.
New glimpses
into the once-secret process of credit scoring have made it easier
than ever to improve your credit -- and reversed some of the advice
we personal finance journalists once gave consumers about managing
plastic.
(For the uninitiated,
credit scores are three-digit numbers increasingly used by lenders
when evaluating your creditworthiness. Insurers, employers and landlords
also use the scores in evaluating the applications they get. Scores
range from 300 to 850. Only about 11% of the surveyed population
ranks above 800; 29% ranks between 750 and 799.)
Anyone who wants
to improve a credit score should first do some basic housekeeping:
Get a copy of your credit report from one of the three major credit
bureaus, scour it for any mistakes and ask the bureau to remove
incorrect information. Once that's accomplished, you can start to
work on burnishing your score.
Here, then,
are the five steps to credit repair:
Pay your bills
on time
Payment history is the single most important factor in determining
your credit score, making up 35% of the total. Since recent history
carries more weight than what happened five years ago, getting in
the habit of making on-time payments is an incredibly powerful way
to start rebuilding your credit rating.
Likewise, delinquent
payments can devastate your score. Missing even one payment can
knock 50 to 100 points off a good score. Skipping payments for a
single month on all your bills can lower your number from a respectable
707 to the dismal range of 562 to 632, according to a new credit
score simulator at MyFico.com, a joint venture between leading credit
scorer Fair Isaac & Co. and credit bureau Equifax.
The simulator
lets you see the impact of various credit behaviors on a sample
score. For $12.95, consumers can order their own scores and see
how a wider array of actions, from opening new accounts to maxing
out their credit cards, could affect their numbers.
Tip: I-ve found
the best way to avoid late payments is to put as many of our bills
on automatic as possible. Our mortgage lender, utilities and phone
service providers are happy to take their payments directly from
our checking account each month. Online bill-payment systems are
another way to ease monthly check-writing chore, and many provide
reminder services so you don't forget a bill. Quicken 2002 and Money
2002 have good reminder features, as well.
Pay down your
debts -- and consider charging less
Lenders like to see plenty of breathing room between the amount
of debt reported on your credit cards and your total credit limits.
The more debt you pay off, the wider that gap and the better your
credit score.
What many people
don't know is that credit scores don't distinguish between those
who carry a balance on their cards and those who daunt. So charging
less can also improve your score -- even if you pay off your credit
cards each month.
Your credit-card
issuer takes a look at your account once every month or so and reports
the outstanding balance on that day to the credit bureaus. This
snapshot doesn't reflect whether you pay off that balance a few
days later or whether you carry it from month to month.
Tip: If you
plan to apply for a mortgage, car loan or other major credit account
in the next year, start paying down those balances now. And if you-re
in the habit of charging everything in sight to your cards -- to
gain more frequent flier miles, say -- consider switching more to
cash in the months before you apply. Depending on your situation,
the loss of a few miles could be more than made up for by a better
score, and thus a lower interest rate.
This kind of
advice, by the way, makes the folks at Fair Isaac more than a little
nervous. Credit scorers and lenders don't want to see people artificially
changing their behavior to pump up their scores. Moderation in using
plastic is never a bad thing, however, and if the desire for a better
score has you using credit more wisely, who's the loser? Oh, other
than the fee-charging, interest-rate-boosting credit-card companies,
of course.
Don't close
old, paid-off accounts
We used to tell people to close accounts they weren't using. Now
here's the word from Craig Watts of Fair Isaac's consumer affairs
office: Closing accounts can never help your score, and often it
can hurt.
This knowledge
is frustrating to those who want to simplify their lives and reduce
the opportunities for identity theft by closing unused accounts.
But credit facts are credit facts.
Shutting down
credit accounts lowers the total credit available to you and makes
any balances you have loom larger in credit score calculations.
If you close your oldest accounts, it can actually shorten the length
of your reported credit history and make you seem less creditworthy.
Of course, perhaps
you can afford not to care too much about the effect of closing
an account. If you don't use your cards much and your score is already
high, the damage caused by shutting down more recent unused accounts
will be minimal and may be well worth the peace of mind.
If you do carry
balances or charge a lot, however, leave all your old accounts open,
especially if you're about to apply for new credit.
Tip: Keep all
this in mind the next time a department store clerk offers you a
10% discount for signing up for a new card. Each new account can
put a small ding on your credit score, and offer a new opportunity
for credit thieves. Since closing accounts can hurt, it's better
to apply only for credit you really need.
Don't
be afraid of Credit
Counseling
If you're overloaded with high-interest debt and are in danger of
falling behind on your payments -- or you already have -- consider
working with a nonprofit agency such as Consumer Credit Counseling
Service to set up a debt repayment plan. These services can negotiate
lower interest rates and help you pay off your bills within a few
years.
Contrary to
what you might have heard, credit counseling probably wont hurt
your credit score. It used to, but about three years ago Fair Isaac
discovered that people in debt-repayment plans were no more likely
to default or go bankrupt than other consumers.
Today the FICO
score ignores any and all references in a credit report to credit
counseling or debt management programs, Watts said.
Those references
to credit counseling, by the way, are typically removed from a credit
report after a consumer has successfully completed a repayment plan.
That means there's no lasting reminder on your credit history.
Watts notes
that a few lenders still use the old scoring system, which punishes
folks on debt repayment plans. Obviously, you'll want to avoid those
lenders -- and perhaps all lenders until you've dug your way out
of credit trouble.
Tip: Don't confuse
legitimate, nonprofit credit counseling services with fly-by-night
outfits or so-called debt settlement firms. Debt settlement will
hurt your credit score, since you-re paying less than you owe, and
fly-by-night firms can disappear with your payments, making your
credit even worse.
Stay
out of Bankruptcy
if you can
Bankruptcy is the nuclear bomb of the credit world -- worse than
delinquencies, loans or collections. Its impact, however, depends
on how many black marks you made on your credit before you filed.
Bankruptcy can
knock 200 points, or more, off the score of someone with otherwise
good credit. People with multiple delinquencies or collections on
their reports will see less decline because their scores are low
to begin with. Either way, recovering from a bankruptcy can be tough.
Once a score is pushed below 620, which bankruptcy inevitably does,
credit becomes scarce and far more expensive.
High-interest
lenders love recent bankruptcies, because they know consumers aren't
allowed to file again for another six years -- plenty of time to
squeeze out lots of high-rate payments.
Mainstream lenders,
however, generally will reject consumers with a bankruptcy on their
record -- and bankruptcies are reported for up to 10 years.
Knowing your
credit score, and the potential impact of a bankruptcy, might help
you steel your resolve to pay off your bills and improve your credit
situation. Or you may decide you can't make matters much worse,
and file anyway.
One
last tip: Once you know the impact on your score, get good objective
advice before filing for bankruptcy. Attorneys may be overly eager
for you to file, while consumer credit counselors may be overly
eager that you not. Books such as Robin Leonard's ?Money Troubles:
Legal Strategies to Cope with Your Debts¦ offers a more balanced
view of the risks and benefits of bankruptcy.
ww.msn.com
by Liz Pulliam Weston
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