Chickenboy
Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002 From: San Antonio, TX Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Dixie quote:
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy Makes perfect sense. Does calculation of your credit scores benefit from ownership / useage of credit cards? I'm referring to non-maxed out, regular payments / paid off balances in a timely fashion? Here, available (but unused) revolving lines of credit is a very influential scoring metric for one's credit rating. Other big factors: regular and timely repayment of installment loans (e.g., car payments, phone contracts, other reasonably big-ticket items); home mortage payment histories; late payments / non-payments; bankruptcy or other similar legal indemnification from debtors; employment history and income. I imagine that some of these are similar abroad, but I don't know for sure. Getting a credit card, using it judiciously and paying it off regularly is generally pretty good for starters. That's a big help. Until recently I didn't have a credit card and I've been careful about my finances so I've had no debt against my name. Whilst that's usually good the banks don't fully agree as I've never had to pay anything back either so there's no history of being able to pay them off. Because of that I picked up a credit card in the summer, it's mainly used for buying gogo juice for the car and paying for hotels when I'm away with the RAF. Everything is then paid off by the end of the month. Moving house frequently is a big minus to your score, which is partly why military personnel can have issues. Here at least, people (myself) that pay off their credit cards in full every month actually have lower credit scores than those that allow some balance to ride on their revolving credit lines and allow interest to accumulate. While these people demonstrate the ability to pay off monthly bills, they're not demonstrating payments against an interest-bearing loan with their revolving credit, I guess. I've heard some credit counselors advise carrying a small balance for a few months, sucking up the interest payments and not paying off fully until some credit history can be demonstrated. Another biggy is the ratio between average balance *used* on a CC versus balance available. The lower this ratio the better. I guess this demonstrates that you aren't using all the superfluous credit that you *could* be overusing if you so desired. Some credit advisors recommend increasing available credit maximum on a card to tweak this ratio. Again, I've got no idea if these same guidelines hold sway across the pond. It would be interesting to hear what rubrics (if any) were different for credit scoring over yonder.
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