Maintaining a strong credit score has become more important than ever, since anything less could greatly increase interest rates you pay or even prevent you from obtaining credit in the first place.
PUBLICIDAD
Jason Alderman
As the economy continues to falter, many people find themselves trapped in financial limbo: unable to cover their bills – such as adjustable rate mortgages – and not qualified for more favorable interest rates that could help because of lenders’ tightening credit standards. A few years ago, just about anyone could secure a mortgage or car loan.
Maintaining a strong credit score has become more important than ever, since anything less could greatly increase interest rates you pay – or even prevent you from obtaining credit in the first place. It could even impact your ability to rent an apartment or secure a job.
Here are a few tips for strengthening your credit score:
Understand how credit scores work. The three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, track your credit history activity and use that information to create a three-digit credit score – commonly referred to as a FICO score, after Fair Isaac Corporation, which developed the proprietary software.
Your FICO score is determined by such factors as your on-time payment record, overall debt amount, credit history duration, ratio of debt to available credit, number of accounts and types of credit used (credit cards, auto loans, mortgages, etc.) Creditors use your score to determine the level of risk involved in lending money to you and set credit limits and interest rates accordingly.
Warning flags that might lower your credit score include:
• Late or insufficient payments for credit cards, loans, utilities and other bills.
• Too many accounts. Think twice before opening unneeded new accounts.
• Maintaining high individual account balances and making frequent balance transfers.
• Closing old accounts. Closing older, unused accounts can backfire because your
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