Credit Scores
Your credit score may seem random, but it tells lenders and other creditors a lot about your financial behavior. It’s calculated from a mix of factors in your credit report and suggests how likely you are to fulfill financial obligations, such as a lease or loan.
Every credit score falls somewhere between 300 and 850. The higher the number, the better your credit history. If you don’t have a credit history, you’ll start at 300, not 0. A score of 670 or higher is considered “very good,” but the average score nationwide is around 700. Keep in mind that older people tend to have higher credit scores than younger people.
Your credit score is used by lenders, creditors, employers, and even insurance companies to gauge your creditworthiness. The more creditworthy you are, the easier and cheaper it is to borrow money, secure insurance, and qualify for lower interest rates.
Creditworthiness goes beyond finances. Future employers and landlords may check your credit score to assess how responsible you are and decide whether to rent you an apartment or offer you a job. In short, a good credit score matters.
Technically, you have several different credit scores—one from each of the main credit bureaus, Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. Each of these bureaus collects data on your financial behavior and uses it to calculate a dynamic score that changes based on the information they have and even the date you check it.
Your credit score is constantly changing based on these factors:
- Payment history (35%)
- Amount owed (30%)
- Account length (15%)
- Mix of accounts types (10%)
- New credit (10%)
Your saving and checking account balances, income, and buying habits don’t factor in your credit score—although lenders may use some info, like income, elsewhere on a credit application.
Assets like a car purchased without a loan won’t appear, either. There’s also no personal info like your marital status, race, or religious and political affiliations.
In the past, credit reports sometimes contained public records like tax liens, parking tickets, and the like, but they don’t anymore.
The best way to boost your credit score is to manage your payment history. Pay on time, in full, and avoid late or missed payments. To do this, only spend what you can afford and don’t run balances too high or overextend yourself with loan payments. Staying below your credit limit helps you get and keep a good credit score.
You may think that the best way to keep your credit score high is to avoid using credit, but that’s not true. Not using credit gives you a bad credit score, just like using too much credit does. Balance is key.
Credit scores weren’t standardized until 1989. Before that, businesses used credit reporting methods that were a lot more subjective and based on character assessments and things like age, race, and marital status—all factors that are absent from today’s credit reports in favor of analytical models.
In the 1960s, there were thousands of credit bureaus. That number eventually shrank to three major bureaus. In 1989, the Fair Isaac Corporation introduced a credit scoring model and the first generalizable credit score—the FICO score, which is still used today. In the mid-1990s, mortgage guarantors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac integrated FICO scores as part of their mortgage decision-making, and credit scores were entrenched into the modern-day financial process.
Sometimes, you’ve got to spend money to make money, and the same is true for credit scores. You can’t buy a better credit score outright, but using credit wisely is a tried-and-true method for boosting your score over time.
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