Why Is A Credit Report Important?Your credit report is significant due to the fact that most financial decisions in your life will involve the data in your report. At the most basic level most lenders will use your report to determine if you will be permitted credit, and to a lesser degree it is even used to determine the rate you pay for mortgages, car loans and even home, car and life insurance.As a quick example of how your credit rating can impact things - consider a mortgage of $230,000 amortized over 30 years. Assuming that your minimum FICO score just barely qualifies, you might pay 8.1% interest, while with an above average score you'd pay just 6.5%. The lower interest rate represents a savings of almost $250 a month, nearly $100K over the entire the term of the mortgage! Improving Your Credit Rating:Although there are some small differences between the way you FICO score is calculated between different agencies, the basic formula is as follows:
Understanding how your score is calculated should give you some insight on how to improve your FICO score:
If you'd like to learn more about your own reports, it's probably easiest to use the credit bureau-operated AnnualCreditReport.com to obtain a free copy of yours from each credit reporting agency. In the U.S.A. a federal law the FACT Act (Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act), entitles every legal U.S. resident to one free copy of their credit report from each credit reporting agency once every twelve months. This report shows marks on your credit and other information, it simply does not contain credit 'scores'. Periodically inspect your reports for errors on your personal information such as a wrong name (e.g. maiden name listed but not married name), wrong addresses (both present and past), correct social security numbers and so on. You should also review your actual financial information and notes for things like loans incorrect loan balances or incorrect or outdated data on credit cards or other accounts you previously cancelled. The more accurate your reports are, the fewer questions a lender will ask, so report all errors and have any found mistakes fixed as soon as possible. |