Anonymous wrote:I haven't owned a credit card in over 8 years. Not because I have a problem spending or went through a bankruptcy, but because I don't like them and I sort of generally feel that paying interest is somewhat immoral. If I cannot afford something I just don't buy it and when I do want something I save up for it. DH and I wanted a new car, so we saved specifically for that and got one cash.
Anonymous wrote:
I thought this was normal until I was curious about my FICO score the other day so I signed up for a free monitoring service through my bank. I thought I always had great credit, only debt I have is a mortgage, paid my student loans early, but my FICO score was not exceptional. Instead, Experian advised that if I wanted to increase my FICO score 10 points (which would get me over 800), it was recommend to take out multiple credit cards or other revolving loan accounts and pay it off regularly. I am sure there is some logic behind this, but it just doesn't make sense to me. Shouldn't I have already demonstrated how good with credit I am in that I don't actually need any and that I paid off my student loan in 5 years and will pay off my mortgage 20 years early?
Anyone else in this situation? What gives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh boy. I am concerned about how little you know about credit and credit cards.
- You only pay interest if you don't pay in full (always pay in full).
- There are dozens and maybe hundreds of cards with no annual fee (for the record, I once swore I'd never pay an annual fee and I laugh at that now bc I have several that I'm happy to pay an annual fee for)
- You're missing out on tons of rewards but, hey, whatever works for you.
And finally, you should know that once you go above a certain amount - around 760 I think - it doesn't matter in the slightest what the score is. For example, if you need a certain score to qualify for the best interest rate, the person with a 780 is getting the same rate as the person with 840. In other words, there is no benefit - none - to getting it above 800 or 820 or whatever.
Credit doesn't quite work the way a lot of people assume. It's worth learning more about.
+1. Also, as long as you know you are not going to get a loan anytime soon, it doesn't really matter. Also, credit card companies charge merchants a small fee every time you use a credit card. Since most people use credit cards, merchants set their prices with that fee in mind. So you are essentially already paying a fee for credit card usage in the form of higher prices, but you're getting none of the rewards credit cards offer to users with good credit scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't I have already demonstrated how good with credit I am in that I don't actually need any and that I paid off my student loan in 5 years and will pay off my mortgage 20 years early?
Ah, the old "you should want my business because I don't need your business" approach.
A lot of people think FICO scores are really crazy, but they make a good amount of sense. The best evidence lenders have of your ability to pay on time is how often you pay on time. If you don't have any revolving accounts, you don't have much evidence you pay on time. And while the idea that paying off student loans very early is bad for your credit seems counter-intuitive for a second, the same logic applies: The earlier you pay it off, the fewer monthly payments you've paid on time, and the less data they'll have.
It doesn't sound like you actually need to increase your credit score since you intend to never use it. But if you really want to increase it and you consider interest quasi-immoral, simply take out a credit card, set it up for auto-pay, and buy a few things a month on it. Then once or twice a year, request a credit limit increase. You don't need to feel immoral because you will literally never incur an interest charge, but after a few years your score will be way up.
OP here. I was always taught that the only time you cannot get credit is when you need it most. Maybe that was wrong advice from my mother.
In any event, I am not sure that I want to pay annual fees to use a credit card just to demonstrate that I am a good credit risk. I would assume that my bank balance and nearly paid off house would probably demonstrate that enough, but these FICO doesn't seem to take assets into consideration.
In the end, you are right that I probably don't need to worry about it too much. It is just that I have been considering investment options and thinking about purchasing an investment property. Since we are paying off our primary residence soon, it seems like a good way to keep the mortgage interest deduction which is very useful for us because DH is a consultant and has to pay self-employment tax which is very costly.
Will increasing my FICO score above 800 result in a lower mortgage interest rate?
Anonymous wrote:Oh boy. I am concerned about how little you know about credit and credit cards.
- You only pay interest if you don't pay in full (always pay in full).
- There are dozens and maybe hundreds of cards with no annual fee (for the record, I once swore I'd never pay an annual fee and I laugh at that now bc I have several that I'm happy to pay an annual fee for)
- You're missing out on tons of rewards but, hey, whatever works for you.
And finally, you should know that once you go above a certain amount - around 760 I think - it doesn't matter in the slightest what the score is. For example, if you need a certain score to qualify for the best interest rate, the person with a 780 is getting the same rate as the person with 840. In other words, there is no benefit - none - to getting it above 800 or 820 or whatever.
Credit doesn't quite work the way a lot of people assume. It's worth learning more about.
Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't I have already demonstrated how good with credit I am in that I don't actually need any and that I paid off my student loan in 5 years and will pay off my mortgage 20 years early?
Ah, the old "you should want my business because I don't need your business" approach.
A lot of people think FICO scores are really crazy, but they make a good amount of sense. The best evidence lenders have of your ability to pay on time is how often you pay on time. If you don't have any revolving accounts, you don't have much evidence you pay on time. And while the idea that paying off student loans very early is bad for your credit seems counter-intuitive for a second, the same logic applies: The earlier you pay it off, the fewer monthly payments you've paid on time, and the less data they'll have.
It doesn't sound like you actually need to increase your credit score since you intend to never use it. But if you really want to increase it and you consider interest quasi-immoral, simply take out a credit card, set it up for auto-pay, and buy a few things a month on it. Then once or twice a year, request a credit limit increase. You don't need to feel immoral because you will literally never incur an interest charge, but after a few years your score will be way up.
Shouldn't I have already demonstrated how good with credit I am in that I don't actually need any and that I paid off my student loan in 5 years and will pay off my mortgage 20 years early?