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Techniques for Better
Credit Reports and Scores
Lenders analyze your credit
scores to determine whether or not to approve a home mortgage, a car
purchase and nearly all other types of loans.
Before lending you money,
creditors want to determine how much of a risk you are—in other words,
how likely you are to repay the money they loan you. Credit scores help
them do that, and the higher your score, the less risk they feel you'll
be.
Most increases to your credit
scores take place over time and require an ongoing effort from you. The
only true credit score quick-fixes are to pay down debt and to
successfully dispute negative information on a credit report.
Credit scoring software looks
at five areas of your credit reports:
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Your Payment History |
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Amounts You Owe |
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Length of Your Credit History |
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Types of Credit Used |
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Provides Your New Credit |
The article How Your Credit
Score is Calculated explains what's included in each of the five
categories.
You can improve your credit
scores by taking a close look at your credit reports and charting a plan
of action to improve them.
Improve Your Payment
History
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Always pay your bills on time.
Late payments play a major role in driving down your score. |
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If you have
past-due bills now, get current and stay that way. |
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Contact your creditors as soon as you know you will have a
problem paying bills on time. Try to work out a payment
arrangement and negotiate with them to keep at least a
portion of the late notations off of your credit reports. |
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If your
situation is serious, see a legitimate, non profit credit counselor. Avoid the
scam artists who promise a quick reversal of your credit problems. |
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if a subsequent homestead declaration is made on another
home, such as a vacation home, it shall terminate a prior homestead on
an actual principal residence.
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a lien on the home recorded prior to the creation
of the homestead.
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Keep Debt to a Minimum
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Keep your
credit card balances low. High debt-to-credit-limit ratios drive your scores
down. |
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Pay off
debt, don't move it around. Owing the same amounts, but having fewer open
accounts, can lower your score if you max out the accounts involved. |
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Don't close unused accounts, because zero balance might help your score. |
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Don't open
new accounts that you don't need as a quickie approach to altering your
debt-to-credit-limit ratios. That can lower your score. |
Length of Your Credit History
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Time is the
only thing that can improve this aspect of your scores, but you can manage it
wisely: |
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Don't open
several new accounts in a short period, especially if your credit history is
less than three years. Adding accounts too rapidly sends up a red flag that you
might not be able to handle your credit responsibly. |
Manage New Credit Wisely
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Several
credit inquiries during a short period means you are attempting to open multiple
new accounts, and that lowers your credit scores. |
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Credit
scoring software usually recognizes when you are shopping for a single loan
within a short period of time, such as a home loan. If multiple inquiries are
necessary, have them pulled as closely together as possible. |
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Checking your own credit report does not affect your scores. |
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Do try to
open a few new accounts if you've had credit problems in the past. Pay them on
time and don't max out your credit limits. |
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