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Tips for Avoiding
Credit Repair
A person can have a squeaky-clean
credit report and then miss one payment,
and suddenly that credit report isn’t so
squeaky clean anymore.
Being smack in the middle of an
attempt to repair a credit report isn’t
really a fun place to be. Fixing past
credit problems takes time and
dedication, and in some cases a complete
change in how money is handled. This
whole headache can be avoided by simply
not allowing credit to spiral out of
control in the first place.
There are lots of things that can harm a
credit score. One of the most common
negative items on credit reports are
late payments. A person can have a
squeaky-clean credit report and then
miss one payment, and suddenly that
credit report isn’t so squeaky clean
anymore. Being thirty days late on a
bill, no matter what the reason, will
show up on a credit report and drop the
credit score down a few points. The
notation of the late payment, by the
way, doesn’t disappear when the account
is brought to current status. The
history of that one late payment will
haunt the credit report for years to
come.
If so much fuss is caused by a single
late payment it is easy to guess what
multiple late payments will do. With
every instance of a late payment, the
credit score falls lower and lower. When
a creditor looks at a credit report they
can usually get a good feel for the
person’s likelihood of staying current
with payments. The creditor will
probably brush off the instance above
with the singular late payment if it’s
the only instance in an otherwise
perfect report. Many late payments,
especially those occurring at different
times, will send a red flag to the
creditor that this particular consumer
isn’t a safe bet. If creditors don’t see
an applicant as a safe bet then the
consumer will not be offered the best
interest rates available.
It isn’t difficult to keep a credit
report clean if you understand what
items are seen as derogatory. Late
payments are notated in varying degrees,
depending upon the lateness of the
payment. When a creditor looks at a
credit report they can see if a bill was
thirty days late or rather ninety days
late…and there is a big difference. A
single delinquency of thirty days
suggests that the consumer simply forgot
to pay the bill that month, but a few
ninety-day delinquencies suggest a
problem paying bills consistently. What
is the moral of this story? Pay your
bills on time, every single month. With
all the bill-paying software available
nowadays there really is no reason to
allow forgetfulness to ruin your credit
rating.
More is not necessarily better when it
comes to credit lines. It is good to
have a couple of open and active credit
accounts to show prompt payment, but if
a consumer has multiple credit cards
open this puts up a red flag. Even if
the cards have zero balances, the fact
that there is available credit tips off
the creditors that even though no money
is owed on these balances right now,
that may well change next week or the
week after, affecting the consumer’s
ability to pay. If all the credit cards
are maxed out it is equally detrimental,
if not more so. From a credit
standpoint, it is best to carry only a
couple of cards and to pay the balance
off every month. If paying off the
balance isn’t feasible, then prompt
payments are a must.
One other item, which many consumers
don’t realize is affecting their credit
rating, is the number of inquiries on
the report. Inquiries are notations at
the end of the report, which list the
creditors who have, by the request of
the consumer, taken a look at the credit
report. Every single time a person
requests a line of credit, an inquiry is
noted on the credit report. This list
tells creditors a lot about the future
spending habits of a customer. If the
inquiry list is full of recent
department store inquiries, a creditor
may see this as a warning sign that the
consumer is getting ready to wrack up
some major debt. So think twice before
filling out an application for credit.
Rest assured that almost every financial
move you make is notated somewhere, and
can come back to haunt you if not
managed well.
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