credit report

Raise your Credit Score for Free and By Yourself

Need to get your credit score up?  Don’t pay anyone to do it–its probably a scam!  There may be a very simple way for you to increase your score staring right at you on your credit reports: your balances.

This may not apply to some people, but for anyone with revolving accounts (credit cards or store cards), your score may be hurting (and badly!) because of these accounts.  Why? The balances.  Often I hear people talking about things like “debt to income” when it comes to credit scores.  Your debt to income ratio has absolutely no impact or effect on your credit score.  None.  What does, however, is your balance to limit ratio, which can have a huge effect on your credit score.

Your balance to limit ratio applies to your revolving accounts and it refers to how much you owe and how much your credit limit is.  It is a percentage calculated like this:

balance owed (reported) ÷ credit limit =

So if have a Visa card with a $1,000 limit and you owe $300 on it, it would be 300/1000 = 0.30. And 0.30 is, of course, 30%.  This percentage is calculated for each of your revolving accounts.

In addition, the scoring software looks at the total amount of credit made available to you compared with the total amount of credit you have used.  Here’s an example – on the table below, the individual has 3 major credit cards and 2 store cards.

Blog Table

 

So, the person above has a total credit card debt of $4,385.  The banks have extended him credit though of $17, 250; overall, he has used about 25% of his total credit available.  This is not bad – remember: credit scores ideally want to see this ratio at under 20%.  And the farther under 20% the better – basically, the best credit scores come from lots of available credit and little to no balances.  I have seen plenty of people with solid payment history – 2 or more years even of never missing a payment – and still have a score in the low 600s.  The BTL is quite often why.  So how do you quickly stop this from hurting your score?

Well, the obvious response is to pay down the balances. You may not have $4,000 lying around though, so you come up with a strategy to maximize the impact based on the amount of money you have.  And you start with correcting the problem from the other side.  Lowering the balance will lower the BTL. So too will increasing the limit.  Call your credit card company and ask for a credit limit increase.  In the table above, raising the Citibank limit from $3,000 to $5,000 brings the BTL on that account from 40% to 28% without a single dollar paid. NOTE:  Requesting a credit limit increase may or may not result in a hard credit inquiry.  If the reason you are working to get your credit score up is for a mortgage, for example, you should find out if your creditors will do increases without a hard inquiry.

As for paying on the balances, I would target one balance in particular first:  the Pier 1 card.  As is often the case with low-limit credit cards, the balance of $725 is not very high but because of it being just $25 shy of the credit limit it is hurting.  That individual account, because it has less than 10% of the credit limit available, is dinging the credit that way as well.  Try to get the limits on your store cards raised if possible.

Pay down the balances.  Determine your statement cut date – one day before the statement cuts is your last day to pay the balance as low as possible.

Free Credit Reports for Denial

ImageI always hate trying to find the links to obtain your free credit report when you have been denied credit, so I am posting them here for everyone:

Experian

TransUnion

Equifax

Personally, I never have any problem getting mine from Experian or TransUnion.  Equifax, however, always redirects me to requesting my report by mail.

Getting Rid of Inquiries on TransUnion

If you are on the road to credit repair, you know how important it is to add new positive accounts. Doing so, however, will start racking up the inquiries on your report pretty quickly.

You will come across references to bumpage or the B* or b* used to reference it without spelling out the word and alerting the credit reporting agencies! Haha.  If you can’t tell, that’s some major sarcasm!

So as far as “bumping” inquiries off of your credit report:  (1) there is no way to get inquiries bumped off of Experian – the inquiries you have on that one will remain there unless you can get them removed some other way; (2) Bumping inquiries off Equifax is possible – I have done it a few years back, but my recent attempts were unsuccessful, presumably due to Choppage or C*; and (3) TransUnion is pretty easy to do and doesn’t take that long.  I am going to tell you an easy way to eliminate your TransUnion inquiries.

What do you need?transunion

You are going to need a triple-daily puller.  For those who don’t know what that is: it is a subscription to a site that allows you to pull/update your credit report and score every day.  There are not a lot of these left anymore – and you need at least two  triple daily pullers.  I used USAA and MPM – the USAA membership and My Privacy Matters:

  • USAA:  You do not need to be in the military or meet any of their other regular membership requirements to join USAA via their website. Just sign up – you will not be able to open a checking account but you can become a member.  After you have joined, login and look for the Credit Check Total benefit they offer.  Sign up for the triple-credit monitoring.  If I am not mistaken, the monthly fee is around $33.  I called and complained about the price per month – they cut it in half and I paid $16 per month for this one.
  • MPM:  My Privacy Matters.  To join MPM, you have to go through a different website – eliminateidtheft.com – they are $11.95 a month

Since you are bumping TransUnion, you can get your results faster by pulling through other TransUnion-based sites:

  • SmartCredit:  Will let you pull your report and score every day if you choose the premium membership of $9.95 per month.
  • CreditKarma:  Even though they don’t pull daily anymore, they pull a few times as a month – and they are FREE

So this could cost you over $50 per month.  Every day, after 24 hours has passed since pulling the day before, make sure you pull your credit report and refresh score through each site.  If you are diligent with doing this, you should see at least a few of the inquiries, if not all of them, gone within a month.

Questions?