The Credit Repair Basics
Before you start boosting
your credit score, you need to know the basics.
You need to know what a credit score is, how it is developed, and why it
is important to you in your everyday life. Lenders certainly know what
sort of information they can get from a credit score, but knowing this
information yourself can help you better see how your everyday financial
decisions impact the financial picture lenders get of you through your credit
score. A few simple tips are all you
need to know to understand the basic principles:
Tip #1: Understand where
credit scores come from.
If you are going to improve
your credit score, then logic has it that you must understand what your credit
score is and how it works. Without this
information, you won’t be able to very effectively improve your score because
you won’t understand how the things you do in daily life affect your
score. If you don’t understand how
your credit score works, you will also be at the mercy of any company that
tries to tell you how you can improve your score - on their terms and at their
price. In general, your credit score
is a number that lets lenders know how much of a credit risk you are. The credit score is a number, usually between
300 and 850, that lets lenders know how well you are paying off your debts and
how much of a credit risk you are.
In general, the higher your
credit score, the better credit risk you make and the more likely you are to be
given credit at great rates. Scores in
the low 600s and below will often give you trouble in finding credit, while
scores of 720 and above will generally give you the best interest rates out
there. However, credit scores are a lot
like GPAs or SAT scores from college days - while they give others a quick
snapshot of how you are doing, they are interpreted by people in different
ways. Some lenders put more emphasis on
credit scores than others. Some lenders will work with
you if you have credit scores in the 600s, while others offer their best rates
only to those creditors with very high scores indeed. Some lenders will look at
your entire credit report while others will accept or reject your loan
application based solely on your credit score. The credit score is based on
your credit report, which contains a history of your past debts and repayments.
Credit bureaus use computers and mathematical calculations to arrive at a
credit score from the information contained in your credit report.
Each credit bureau uses
different methods to do this (which is why you will have different scores with
different companies) but most credit bureaus use the FICO system. FICO is an
acronym for the credit score calculating software offered by Fair Isaac
Corporation company. This is by far the
most used software since the Fair Isaac Corporation developed the credit score
model used by many in the financial industry and is still considered one of the
leaders in the field. In fact, credit scores are
sometimes called FICO scores or FICO ratings, although it is important to
understand that your score may be tabulated using different software. One other thing you may want
to understand about the software and mathematics that goes into your credit
score is the fact that the math used by the software is based on research and
comparative mathematics. This is an
important and simple concept that can help you understand how to boost your
credit score. In simple terms, what this
means is that your credit score is in a way calculated on the same principles
as your insurance premiums.
Your insurance company likely
asks you questions about your health, your lifestyle choices (such as whether
you are a smoker) because these bits of information can tell the insurance
company how much of a risk you are and how likely you are to make large claims
later on. This is based on
research. Studies have shown, for
example, that smokers tend to be more prone to serious illnesses and so require
more medical attention. If you are a
smoker, you may face higher insurance premiums because of this. Similarly, credit bureaus and
lenders often look at general patterns.
Since people with too many debts tend not to have great rates of
repayment, your credit score may suffer if you have too many debts, for
example. Understanding this can help you
in two ways: It will let you see that your credit score is not a
personal reflection of how “good” or “bad”






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