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Need Credit or Insurance? Your Credit Score Helps Determine What You'll Pay
Ever wonder how a lender decides whether to grant you credit?
For years, creditors have been using credit scoring systems to
determine if you'd be a good risk for credit cards, auto loans,
and mortgages. These days, many more types of businesses -
including insurance companies and phone companies - are using
credit scores to decide whether to approve you for a loan or
service and on what terms. Auto and homeowners insurance
companies are among the businesses that are using credit scores
to help decide if you'd be a good risk for insurance. A higher
credit score means you are likely less of a risk, and in turn,
means you will be more likely to get credit or insurance - or pay
less for it.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation's consumer
protection agency, wants you to know how credit scoring works.
What is credit scoring?
Credit scoring is a system creditors use to help determine
whether to give you credit. It also may be used to help decide
the terms you are offered or the rate you will pay for the loan.
Information about you and your credit experiences, like your
bill-paying history, the number and type of accounts you have,
whether you pay your bills by the date they're due, collection
actions, outstanding debt, and the age of your accounts, is
collected from your credit report. Using a statistical program,
creditors compare this information to the loan repayment history
of consumers with similar profiles. For example, a credit scoring
system awards points for each factor that helps predict who is
most likely to repay a debt. A total number of points - a credit
score - helps predict how creditworthy you are - how likely it is
that you will repay a loan and make the payments when they're
due.
Some insurance companies also use credit report information,
along with other factors, to help predict your likelihood of
filing an insurance claim and the amount of the claim.
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They may consider these factors when they decide whether to grant you
insurance and the amount of the premium they charge. The credit
scores insurance companies use sometimes are called insurance
scores or credit-based insurance scores.
Credit scores and credit reports
Your credit report is a key part of many credit scoring
systems. That's why it is critical to make sure your credit
report is accurate. Federal law gives you the right to get a free
copy of your credit reports from each of the three national
consumer reporting companies once every 12 months.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) also gives you the right
to get your credit score from the national consumer reporting
companies. They are allowed to charge a reasonable fee, generally
around $8, for the score. When you buy your score, often you get
information on how you can improve it.
To order your free annual report from one or all the national
consumer reporting companies, and to purchase your credit score,
visit www.annualcreditreport.com,
call toll-free 877-322-8228, or complete the Annual Credit Report Request Form and mail it
to: Annual Credit Report Request Service, P. O. Box 105281,
Atlanta, GA 30348-5281. For more information, see Your Access to Free Credit Reports.
How is a credit scoring system developed?
To develop a credit scoring system or model, a creditor or
insurance company selects a random sample of its customers, or a
sample of similar customers, and analyzes it statistically to
identify characteristics that relate to risk. Each of the
characteristics then is assigned a weight based on how strong a
predictor it is of who would be a good risk. Each company may use
its own scoring model, different scoring models for different
types of credit or insurance, or a generic model developed by a
scoring company.
Under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), a creditor's
scoring system may not use certain characteristics - for example,
race, sex, marital status, national origin, or religion - as
factors. The law allows creditors to use age in properly designed
scoring systems. But any credit scoring system that includes age
must give equal treatment to elderly applicants.
What can I do to improve my score?
Credit scoring systems are complex and vary among creditors or
insurance companies and for different types of credit or
insurance. If one factor changes, your score may change - but
improvement generally depends on how that factor relates to
others the system considers. Only the business using the scoring
knows what might improve your score under the particular model
they use to evaluate your application.
Nevertheless, scoring models usually consider the following
types of information in your credit report to help compute your
credit score:
- Have you paid your bills on time? You can count on
payment history to be a significant factor. If your
credit report indicates that you have paid bills late,
had an account referred to collections, or declared
bankruptcy, it is likely to affect your score negatively.
- Are you maxed out? Many scoring systems evaluate the
amount of debt you have compared to your credit limits.
If the amount you owe is close to your credit limit, it's
likely to have a negative effect on your score.
- How long have you had credit? Generally, scoring systems
consider the length of your credit track record. An
insufficient credit history may affect your score
negatively, but factors like timely payments and low
balances can offset that.
- Have you applied for new credit lately? Many scoring
systems consider whether you have applied for credit
recently by looking at inquiries on your
credit report. If you have applied for too many new
accounts recently, it could have a negative effect on
your score. Every inquiry isn't counted: for example,
inquiries by creditors who are monitoring your account or
looking at credit reports to make prescreened
credit offers are not considered liabilities.
- How many credit accounts do you have and what kinds of
accounts are they? Although it is generally considered a
plus to have established credit accounts, too many credit
card accounts may have a negative effect on your score.
In addition, many scoring systems consider the type of
credit accounts you have. For example, under some scoring
models, loans from finance companies may have a negative
effect on your credit score.
Scoring models may be based on more than the information in
your credit report. When you are applying for a mortgage loan,
for example, the system may consider the amount of your down
payment, your total debt, and your income, among other things.
Improving your score significantly is likely to take some
time, but it can be done. To improve your credit score under most
systems, focus on paying your bills in a timely way, paying down
any outstanding balances, and staying away from new debt.
Are credit scoring systems reliable?
Credit scoring systems enable creditors or insurance companies
to evaluate millions of applicants consistently on many different
characteristics. To be statistically valid, these systems must be
based on a big enough sample. They generally vary among
businesses that use them.
Properly designed, credit scoring systems generally enable
faster, more accurate, and more impartial decisions than
individual people can make. And some creditors design their
systems so that some applicants - those with scores not high
enough to pass easily or low enough to fail absolutely - are
referred to a credit manager who decides whether the company or
lender will extend credit. Referrals can result in discussion and
negotiation between the credit manager and the would-be borrower.
What if I am denied credit or insurance, or don't get the
terms I want?
If you are denied credit, the ECOA requires that the creditor
give you a notice with the specific reasons your application was
rejected or the news that you have the right to learn the reasons
if you ask within 60 days. Ask the creditor to be specific:
Indefinite and vague reasons for denial are illegal. Acceptable
reasons might be your income was low or you
haven't been employed long enough. Unacceptable reasons
include you didn't meet our minimum standards or
you didn't receive enough points on our credit scoring
system.
Sometimes you can be denied credit or insurance - or initially
be charged a higher premium - because of information in your
credit report. In that case, the FCRA requires the creditor or
insurance company to give you the name, address, and phone number
of the consumer reporting company that supplied the information.
Contact the company to find out what your report said. This
information is free if you ask for it within 60 days of being
turned down for credit or insurance. The consumer reporting
company can tell you what's in your report; only the creditor or
insurance company can tell you why your application was denied.
If a creditor or insurance company says you were denied credit
or insurance because you are too near your credit limits on your
credit cards, you may want to reapply after paying down your
balances. Because credit scores are based on credit report
information, a score often changes when the information in the
credit report changes.
If you've been denied credit or insurance or didn't get the
rate or terms you want, ask questions:
- Ask the creditor or insurance company if a credit scoring
system was used. If it was, ask what characteristics or
factors were used in the system, and how you can improve
your application.
- If you get the credit or insurance, ask the creditor or
insurance company whether you are getting the best rate
and terms available. If you're not, ask why.
- If you are denied credit or not offered the best rate
available because of inaccuracies in your credit report,
be sure to dispute the inaccurate information with the
consumer reporting company. To learn more about this
right, see How to Dispute Credit Report Errors.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent,
deceptive, and unfair business practices in the marketplace and
to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid
them. To file a complaint or to get free
information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261.
The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer
Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative
tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement
agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
Source: The United States Federal Trade Commission, July
2007
If You're Still Having Credit Score Problems, Can Bad Credit be Deleted?
Yes, it can. Despite the fervent proclamations of bureaucrats and credit bureaus everywhere, a simple fact remains: negative credit listings are deleted from peoples' credit reports by the thousands each and every day.
A few years ago, an attorney from Lexington Law. visited with a regulatory agency for a casual conversation with two agents. The Agency's office, as a matter of course, believed the credit bureaus' claim that bad credit couldn't be deleted. The visiting Lexington attorney asked, "How many negative listings would you have to see deleted from consumer credit reports before you would believe that bad credit can be deleted: ten? fifty? a hundred? one thousand?" The agents responded with only blank stares.
"How about 50,000 deleted listings, would that convince you?" continued the Lexington attorney. From his briefcase he pulled a stack of papers six inches high.
"In these pages, we have listed the permanent deletion of over 50,000 listings from our clients' files in the last two years alone," he explained. The agents pulled the stack across the conference table and began to pick through the pages, taking in the massive list.
"But have you deleted any bankruptcies?" shot back one of the agents, "we know that bankruptcies can't be deleted." The Lexington attorney leaned across the table and ran his finger down the first page.
"There's one deleted bankruptcy... and, there's another,... and another,... and another. Should I go on?" asked the Lexington attorney.
The agents sat back in their chairs. "You know," began the junior agent, "I have this one listing on my credit report that simply must belong to somebody else..."
How is Credit Repair Possible?
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) allows a consumer to challenge the information on his credit report on the basis of "completeness and accuracy." When a consumer files a dispute, the credit bureaus must contact the source of the credit information (the creditor) and confirm that the information is accurate, verifiable, and not obsolete. In some circumstances, the credit bureau is required to go beyond a simple verification of the creditor's own computer record. If, within 30 days, the credit bureau has not received verification from the creditor, then the credit bureau must promptly delete the credit listing.
Learn More.


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