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Originally posted by Nash B. View Postaverage account life uses active and inactive accounts, calculated from the account's opening date, right? Then it wouldn't impact it
Account 1: 12 months
Account 2: 36 months
48months / 2cards = 24month average. Closing cards just means a greater denominator. Some people have cards open 20 years and some open and closed in a month. THat one month card will kill the average.Last edited by 8mpg; 01-26-2016, 07:52 AM.
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Originally posted by 8mpg View PostIts the total average life.
Account 1: 12 months
Account 2: 36 months
48months / 2cards = 24month average. Closing cards just means a greater denominator. Some people have cards open 20 years and some open and closed in a month. THat one month card will kill the average.
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Originally posted by 8mpg View PostIts the total average life.
Account 1: 12 months
Account 2: 36 months
48months / 2cards = 24month average. Closing cards just means a greater denominator. Some people have cards open 20 years and some open and closed in a month. THat one month card will kill the average.
Most of the information I've found says that it includes closed accounts as well as open, and everything I've seen says it uses the date the account was opened to compute its age rather than how long the account was/has been open (which only differs in the case of closed accounts).
Scenario 1: the calculation includes closed accounts.
Closing the unused accounts won't impact average age of accounts, but it will lower your available credit and credit:debt ratio.
Scenario 2: the calculation only uses open accounts.
2a. The smaller accounts are younger than your average age of accounts.
Closing the newer accounts will increase your average age of accounts.
2b. The smaller accounts are the same age as your average account age.
Closing them will have no impact on average age of accounts.
2c. The smaller accounts are older than your average age of accounts.
Closing them will decrease your average age of accounts.Originally posted by BroncojohnnyHOORAY ME and FUCK YOU!
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From tracking my own credit, closing a newish account (less than a year old) has brought down my average life of credit. I did a lot of credit card churning for airline miles and points and saw it hit me. My average life went from say 7 years down to 3-4.
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Originally posted by Nash B. View PostAre you sure that wasn't the initial hit from opening the account?
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