How Responsible Choices Can Hurt Your Credit Score
Credit scores can affect you more than you know. Employers look at credit scores. Landlords look at credit scores. Bill providers look at credit scores, and they might decide to charge you if yours gets too low. With all this pressure, you’ve no doubt started working on some good habits for improving your credit score. The first step is to be sure you pay your bills on time. Then, make sure not to max out your credit line, and be sure you do not default on any loans.
However, you might be surprised to find out that some actions you take to improve your credit score are actually hurting it. If your credit score isn’t where you want it to be, it might be due to one of these habits. Here are four ideas that sound like good ideas that might actually be hurting your credit score:
Debt Settlement
Settling your old debt can seem like an easy way to get out of a sticky situation. You make an agreement with a third party, pay a part of your debt and the owner writes off the rest of it. However, unless it’s at least 90 days since the debt was due, it’s always better for your credit score to pay the debt back in full yourself. Settling a debt for less than you owe can take your credit score down as much as a hundred points. This happens because the debtor only took your settlement on the assumption they’d never see the full amount you owed. Future lenders worry that they’ll end up in the same situation, and that makes them hesitant to lend.
Turning Down Credit
It might seem like a good idea to reject a higher credit limit: If your credit card offers to boost your limit, it might seem to indicate to you that you have more money to spend. But, if you’ve struggled with responsible credit management in the past, you might think you should turn it down in an effort to keep your spending in check. Keeping your credit limit low can give you a budget and a sense of security regarding when you’ll stop yourself from spending. However, to credit bureaus, a higher credit limit does come with benefits. To be exact, it can boost your score quite a lot through something called a credit utilization ratio. That’s the ratio of your credit card balance to your credit card limit. The less you spend relative to what your limit is, the higher your score in terms of this factor. That means, if you have a higher credit limit, you’ll be using less of it, and therefore increasing your score.
Avoiding Credit Cards
With all this rigmarole and paperwork, many people might think it’s easier to just not have a credit card at all. While it might make your life simpler at first, it can complicate your relationship with credit in the future. You might not need credit for day-to-day things like buying groceries or gas, but if you ever plan on getting a loan, you’ll need a credit history to show you are a responsible lending candidate. You need a credit history to receive a home loan, auto loans and to prove to potential landlords and employers that you can be trusted. As long as you’re paying everything on time and not carrying a high balance, a credit card is much more beneficial in the long run.
Closing Paid Accounts
Paying off a credit card can be a big struggle. Once it’s over, your instinct might lead you to throw it away, burn it or otherwise have it completely out of your life once and for all. Credit reporting agencies say something different, though. Since 15 percent of your credit score is the length of your credit history, you want to keep your cards for as long as possible. Additionally, your credit utilization score is worth 30 percent of your total score. Closing a credit card account also kills available credit, which lowers that balance-to-limit ratio. You can destroy the card itself and delete its record from online shopping sites to be certain you’ll never accidentally use it, but don’t cancel it. Even after all that, you should keep the account open (provided there’s no annual fee attached to it), just to keep your score up.
Credit scores have never been easy. There’s an endless number of twists, turns and troubles to keep in mind. And you have to be in charge and be responsible enough to pay everything on time.
This article is for educational purposes only. WeStreet Credit Union makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or specific suitability of any information presented. Information provided should not be relied on or interpreted as legal, tax or financial advice. Nor does the information directly relate to our products and/or services terms and conditions.