Anonymous wrote:840 score here... I always pay off early. Use my credit card once a month, pay online the next day. Car loans: get a 5 year, but pay within 15 months. I started out with a score of about 550, and started doing this religiously maybe 10 years ago, so yes you can bump that score up significantly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I've found that it's very difficult to crack a very high credit score if you don't have a lengthy credit history. You can have a very good credit score (which you do) but even if you do everything right, if you only have a 5-10 year credit history, you're unlikely to be at the very peak scores.
Your score is going to fluctuate at different times of month depending on how recently you've paid a bill and also the three different companies will calculate your score differently so you could very well be over 750 with one of the other companies. With a score of 742, I would just keep doing what you are doing. With time, your score will continue to improve, and in another few years that late bill will drop off completely which will likely be another jump.
This is my problem. I am in my late 20s and my score hovers in the 750s. I'm a perfectionist and want it higher, though, for buying a house. I know that will come with a mortgage and also time. I didn't get a credit card or establish any history until I was 22 and I wish I would have done it (responsibly, of course) sooner.
Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I've found that it's very difficult to crack a very high credit score if you don't have a lengthy credit history. You can have a very good credit score (which you do) but even if you do everything right, if you only have a 5-10 year credit history, you're unlikely to be at the very peak scores.
Your score is going to fluctuate at different times of month depending on how recently you've paid a bill and also the three different companies will calculate your score differently so you could very well be over 750 with one of the other companies. With a score of 742, I would just keep doing what you are doing. With time, your score will continue to improve, and in another few years that late bill will drop off completely which will likely be another jump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't take on faith anything a car dealership loan person says. They are looking for ways to take more money from you. Pull your own reports at annualcreditreport.com.
Agree. I hoped you did not accept a higher rate. This score qualifies you for the lowest interest rate. The higher your interest rate the more money the finance person gets.
Anonymous wrote:Don't take on faith anything a car dealership loan person says. They are looking for ways to take more money from you. Pull your own reports at annualcreditreport.com.
Anonymous wrote:Don't take on faith anything a car dealership loan person says. They are looking for ways to take more money from you. Pull your own reports at annualcreditreport.com.