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Originally posted by 2011GT View Postyou know they say the higher your credit score the more you like debt...
I've had an 847 when I got the lease on the BMW and have only one unpaid credit card with only $200 charged to it. Then there is the car payments and mortgage. Doing things like paying your bill on time, maintaining a favorable income to debt ratio, keeping up a constant but small rotating debt amount (credit cards).
After getting the lease my score dropped to 792. I expect it to drop a little more when we finish buying the house next month but it'll come back up soon because we are about to pay off our Adoption loan. We aren't that far from paying off my wife's car.
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Originally posted by Sgt Beavis View PostThen they would be wrong..
I've had an 847 when I got the lease on the BMW and have only one unpaid credit card with only $200 charged to it. Then there is the car payments and mortgage. Doing things like paying your bill on time, maintaining a favorable income to debt ratio, keeping up a constant but small rotating debt amount (credit cards).
After getting the lease my score dropped to 792. I expect it to drop a little more when we finish buying the house next month but it'll come back up soon because we are about to pay off our Adoption loan. We aren't that far from paying off my wife's car.
Seriously though. i thought it was a credit to debt ratio that mattered. Never heard of the income to debt ratio.
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Originally posted by mstng86 View PostYou are pathetic. needing all that debt. You should be ashamed.
Seriously though. i thought it was a credit to debt ratio that mattered. Never heard of the income to debt ratio.
Also, if I recall correctly, having too much revolving credit (even if it is unused) can hurt you because it is easy for you to go deep in debt very quickly..
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Originally posted by krazy kris View PostI was told by a loan officer for every 12 inquiries in a 2 week span it counts as 1 inquiryOriginally posted by Big A View PostThere must be some caveat to that, or perhaps they don't keep the best tabs on what. When I bought my car a few years ago both BMW and my credit union ran the financing, and both showed up as hard inquiries on my credit report.
Perhaps FICO wasn't able to connect the 2 as an inquiry for the same car for whatever reason, both have dropped off at this point though.
This graph shows what makes up the score (at least on the mortgage FICO model):
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Originally posted by SVT Lurch View PostAll mortgage inquiries within 30 days of the first count as one according to the agency where we pull our reports. I would imagine the auto and revolving inquiries are similar. If you're seeing different scores it is probably because of the different models used by different creditors, not because your score actually went down.
This graph shows what makes up the score (at least on the mortgage FICO model):
Originally posted by 4EyedTurd View PostSo, how much does checking your score hurt you?
Unless you are talking having it checked for a loan, then a creditor pulling your report shows as a hard inquiry, and you score will go down a little. It's not much if it's just 1 or 2, but the more you have at any given time affects it even more. When I moved to Sac, I already still had my car and a credit card inquiry. Then the leasing company pulled it, the cable company did, and PG&E (utilities), and I think it dropped like 40 points IIRC.
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Originally posted by Big A View PostI don't think that it does, as long as you're using a reporting service. If you aren't, and are applying for cards, and then requesting after a denial, then yeah.
Unless you are talking having it checked for a loan, then a creditor pulling your report shows as a hard inquiry, and you score will go down a little. It's not much if it's just 1 or 2, but the more you have at any given time affects it even more. When I moved to Sac, I already still had my car and a credit card inquiry. Then the leasing company pulled it, the cable company did, and PG&E (utilities), and I think it dropped like 40 points IIRC.
I was thinking about checking it since I've knocked out a good bit of debt recently. Anyone wanna recommend a reporting service?
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Originally posted by 4EyedTurd View PostI was thinking about checking it since I've knocked out a good bit of debt recently. Anyone wanna recommend a reporting service?
FWIW paying off debt will help your credit to debt, and debt to income, but it didn't make mine move much back when I paid off my truck and all credit cards. I have some blemishes from back when I was out of work after my wreck though, and unable to pay some of the medical bills, so I am sure that outweighs the above quite a bit. I've been trying to get back on top ever since, to be able to get a decent rate on a new house, thus wanting to monitor my score.
Not to say I didn't owe the bills, it's just irks me knowing how much all involved made off of my insurance, and it still put me in a bind (physically and financially).
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Originally posted by Big A View PostI use freecreditreport.com, I guess those stupid commercials actually do work. I wanna say that you can request a copy of your report once every so often, like every 6 months or a year, but I don't recall.
FWIW paying off debt will help your credit to debt, and debt to income, but it didn't make mine move much back when I paid off my truck and all credit cards. I have some blemishes from back when I was out of work after my wreck though, and unable to pay some of the medical bills, so I am sure that outweighs the above quite a bit. I've been trying to get back on top ever since, to be able to get a decent rate on a new house, thus wanting to monitor my score.
Not to say I didn't owe the bills, it's just irks me knowing how much all involved made off of my insurance, and it still put me in a bind (physically and financially).
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Originally posted by bonnie&clyde View Postyeah they all said my credit score was too low, i thought anything over 650 is good....guess my 685 was not good enough :-(
Also, the last I played in this was for my home mortgage. There was 50 point variations from one place to another. WTF?
I laughed at the higher your score the higher your debt. 1. It's all relative to income and 2. We all know plenty of people in the 800+ club with little to now debt. Or assets to cover if there were an issue.Originally posted by MR EDDU defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.
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Originally posted by 4EyedTurd View PostI was thinking about checking it since I've knocked out a good bit of debt recently. Anyone wanna recommend a reporting service?
I really like the alerts, you get a pulse on anything you do that affects your score. Sometimes it's just the OPPOSITE of what you think will happen, but you know within a week.
It's a 100 bucks or so for a year service, but you can usually find coupon codes that make it 50-75 dollars.Originally posted by MR EDDU defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.
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Originally posted by Sgt Beavis View PostThen they would be wrong..
I've had an 847 when I got the lease on the BMW and have only one unpaid credit card with only $200 charged to it. Then there is the car payments and mortgage. Doing things like paying your bill on time, maintaining a favorable income to debt ratio, keeping up a constant but small rotating debt amount (credit cards).
After getting the lease my score dropped to 792. I expect it to drop a little more when we finish buying the house next month but it'll come back up soon because we are about to pay off our Adoption loan. We aren't that far from paying off my wife's car.
Sounds like a Dave Ramsey idea....
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