• mosiacmango
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    1 year ago

    You don’t have to be in debt, but you do need open credit lines. Having debt on them actually makes your score worse.

    Her score likely went down because she closed out a credit line, i.e the open loan, so technically the “i have an open 5yr loan ive been paying on diligently” is no longer part of her score. The fact that she did pay it off is part of that score, but its weighted differently.

    If she instead had 40k of credit cards she had open for 5yrs, with zero debt on them, her score would have gone up. Just having the account open, even not using them, shows a high “credit to debt usage” ratio and “a long time open loan.” Both of those make up about 45% of your “credit score.”

    So no, you dont have to use a CC every month to keep a high credit score. If you want a high score, you want to open a credit card or 2 for their max value until you get about 30k-40k of total credit, and then don’t use them at all. Not a bit. Never close them. The “long time accounts” + “high amount of debt not in use” + “never delinquent” is roughly 80% of your score. You can sail into the 700s/800s if you dont have any other credit hit.

    • @garretble@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      While this is all technically correct it’s still dogshit that your score goes down when you do the thing you are supposed to do with a loan.

      Your options are:

      Take out a loan and pay it off: score goes down

      Take out a loan and don’t pay it off/default: score goes down

      • deweydecibel
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        381 year ago

        Remember that your credit score doesn’t exist for you. It’s not for your benefit. It’s for the benefit of lenders, and they don’t give a damn how unfair the system is.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate
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          171 year ago

          This is what people are missing. Credit score is a completely valid metric, but it’s just a measure of how likely lenders are to make money off of you.

          • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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            1 year ago

            What I don’t get is: since she paid off her car loan, she’d have more disposal income now…? Shouldn’t that increase her credit score?

            • AFK BRB Chocolate
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              61 year ago

              There’s a mess of things that go into their formula, but as I recall one of them is actively paying on things. We had our daughter get a credit card and told her that, instead of using her ATM all the time, she should use the credit card, but pay it off every month. Doesn’t cost her anything to do that, and it builds a credit rating way more than having a card with a zero balance. Doing that, they’ll also end up raising your limit, which increases your rating too. Oh, and if you pay your credit bills as soon as they come due instead of just before the deadline, that also increases your rating.

      • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        Seriously. “I rarely take on debt, regularly save aggressively, and pay off my debts as quickly as is convenient” means I’m bad to loan to in their eyes when if you had evidence of all that as an ordinary person I’m exactly who you’d want to loan money to.

        • @garretble@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s how I’ve tried to be (and currently have no debt!).

          When I needed to buy a car a few years ago, they gave me a terrible rate because I had a bad score. I had paid off a couple of personal loans AND all my student loans…but it’d been a few years so my credit score had dropped. So fuck me for not borrowing money every day.

          I ended up doing a co-sign for a better rate. And guess what? I paid off that car loan a couple years early and got dinged on my credit just like the original post.

          But I know they don’t care about any of that and are actually mad I didn’t pay the minimum for the entirety of the loan.

        • Sibelius Ginsterberg
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          11 year ago

          If I would loan money to people, I want them to pay me back as soon as they can. But if I wanted to make money with loans, I’d want my customers to pay their loans as slowly as possible to put a lot of interest rates in my pocket.

    • @TheSambassador@lemmy.world
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      251 year ago

      You do have to use them a little bit though. It wasn’t a great surprise to learn that my credit score evaporated right when I was looking to buy a house because a credit card I hadn’t used in 7 years was turned off due to not using it. Having no debt, lots of savings, and decent income apparently counts for nothing.

      • partial_accumen
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        11 year ago

        Having no debt,

        This is the only part the credit reporting agency sees. In that situation they have to make the lending score base on your history, which tells them nothing of your current situation.

        lots of savings, and decent income apparently counts for nothing.

        The credit reporting agencies don’t see any of this. There is no component in a credit score for your savings or income.

        • @TheSambassador@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Sure, the credit agency doesn’t see it, but the person I’m talking to at the bank to get a loan can see it when I show it to them. But it doesn’t matter and they only really seem to care about the credit score.

          • partial_accumen
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            11 year ago

            My guess is that the bank may start with the credit score, and if its below a threshold the bank is willing to lend to, then they don’t look any further. Unless you have a truly egregious credit history, you’ll likely find other lenders more interested in your business.

            Most companies don’t want every customer. There are those that only want the safest customers because they have the lowest risk, and that may mean you might get declined even if you would otherwise have the means to service the debt.

      • mosiacmango
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I dug into all this a while back while I was trying to raise my score. Turns out the most productive thing I did was just ask my current cards to up my limit. A couple of them doubled, so it dropped my utilization way down, which shot my score way up. I think I was around 675 and went up to 750 just with that trick. I got into the 800s by paying off the credit cards.

        Its an annoying metagame you have to play to get the “good interest rates,” but those little tricks can save you a fuckton of money over time.

        • @Yokozuna@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yep, find credit cards with no monthly fee and open them. I have 3 lines of credit and only use the one with the highest benefits. I pay off the bill after it hits my statement, and my credit is always 780-790. Also, like you said, up your limit if you can to get a lower debt to available credit ratio.

          Edit: I bet the people down voting me have terrible credit lol.

          • @TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Try paying it off before it hits the bill. I bet you can squeeze a few points out of it. A friend and I both do that and I’ve been at 804 since summer and his sits between 810 and 815. Although in truth there’s no real difference between your lowest and my friend’s highest in terms of what interest rates you’ll get.

            • @Yokozuna@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              Every time I’ve done that it seems to tank my score by like 10 points. No idea what that’s about, the whole system is so convoluted its hard to tell what really makes it go down when it does sometimes.

      • @ChillPenguin@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        I think the only way we will know this is real is if you post your social security number too. You know, for science.