The information used to calculate credit score can be broken down into five major parts. Your payment history with banks and other lenders will account for 35% of the score, the amount of money you owe for 30%, and the length of your credit history for 15%. New credit and a statistical assessment of how healthy your credit mix is will both account for 10%.
Credit score is not based in any way on the following information:
- references to debt management or credit counseling programs.
- person’s marital status.
- current employment status, including how long with the same employer.
- credit report inquiries made by you, employers, insurance companies, or banks if made without your knowledge.
- what interest rates are charged on your credit cards, etc.
- public assistance received.
- person’s age.
- child or family support received.
You can increase your score by:
- always paying bills on time.
- paying off or reducing credit card and other debt.
- keeping old, unused credit cards, departments store cards and other “revolving” credit accounts open, even if you don’t use them.
- not applying for credit very often.
- correcting mistakes on your credit reports.
Banks decisions are made according to their own standards.
While the majority of lenders use credit score as a key factor in approving credit, other facts play their parts as well, among them: your income, employment status and length of time at present address, to name a few. Each bank has its own standards. What score is acceptable for a particular loan or credit product depends solely on a lender. The person’s credit score might not be high enough to get credit with one bank, and perfectly acceptable with another.
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