Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:560 something. CLEARLY I WIN.
569! Wanna be friends? We can hang out in my van down by the river.
Only if you have candy and/or beer.![]()
Doritos and malt liquor...deal?![]()
Ok![]()
Unfortunately, I got you all beat. 480-510 here. So sad. Not really sure how to get out from under this cloud. Everytime I start making progress, something else happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Credit score can be meaningless. If you don't incur debt and have lots of money you may have a lower credit score than a person with debt and much lower savings....
My credit score got dinged pretty badly when I tore up all my credit cards and paid off my car. Why is that? I had to reopen a card.
You need a low debt to debt limit ratio and you made your debt limit plummet. You might have also tore up your oldest card, which hurts your score. The ideal is a small number of high limit cards that you 'vr had for a long time, each if which having a tiny balance on them that you pay regularly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:560 something. CLEARLY I WIN.
569! Wanna be friends? We can hang out in my van down by the river.
Only if you have candy and/or beer.![]()
Doritos and malt liquor...deal?![]()
Ok![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Credit score can be meaningless. If you don't incur debt and have lots of money you may have a lower credit score than a person with debt and much lower savings....
My credit score got dinged pretty badly when I tore up all my credit cards and paid off my car. Why is that? I had to reopen a card.
You need a low debt to debt limit ratio and you made your debt limit plummet. You might have also tore up your oldest card, which hurts your score. The ideal is a small number of high limit cards that you 'vr had for a long time, each if which having a tiny balance on them that you pay regularly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Credit score can be meaningless. If you don't incur debt and have lots of money you may have a lower credit score than a person with debt and much lower savings....
My credit score got dinged pretty badly when I tore up all my credit cards and paid off my car. Why is that? I had to reopen a card.
Anonymous wrote:Credit score can be meaningless. If you don't incur debt and have lots of money you may have a lower credit score than a person with debt and much lower savings....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:726.
To clarify, I have never been late/missed a payment, always pay my entire balances in full each month, and am only 22. No student loans, car loans, mortgage, other debt. Just credit cards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where can you get your credit checked for free? I haven't a clue what my number is.
Haha you can't. Even though your credit score determines so much.
It annoys me to no extend how MY score and MY information are not free and open to me looking at them whenever I please. It's a scam.
Discover now gives you your FICO score on each credit card statement. Thanks, Discover!![]()
I just got mine written at the bottom of my discover bill and I'm not sure I'm ok with this. I kind of find it invasive and didn't ask for it and its none of their business anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:790-810 or so, on the low end now because we've been doing a major renov/addition so monthly credit card bills are high (but paid in full each month). That's the part the score can't see (that while the balance may be high these few months, there is ~300 times the balance in available savings to pay it from).
Your score drops even though you pay on time and in full?