Browse by Topic

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally


©
2023 MintLife Blog.

All rights reserved. Intuit and QuickBooks are registered trademarks of Intuit Inc. Terms and conditions, features, support, pricing, and service options subject to change without notice.

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally


©
2023 MintLife Blog.

All rights reserved. Intuit and QuickBooks are registered trademarks of Intuit Inc. Terms and conditions, features, support, pricing, and service options subject to change without notice.

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally


What Is a Credit Report and Why Does it Matter? – MintLife Blog

Skip to main content

financial wellness. Your credit report includes your revolving accounts — such as credit cards and home equity lines of credit — as well as non-revolving accounts like school and car loans. Credit reports also note any missed payments, the length of your credit history, and your utilization rate on each account. On the whole, the report acts as a central location for measuring your current credit health in detail.

This vital collection of data gathered by a credit bureau helps calculate your credit score and inform potential lenders, landlords, and even employers about your financial wellness, habits, and routines. Your credit report is also a place to keep yourself on track. View your borrowing habits at a glance, make adjustments to possibly raise your credit score, or even catch fraudulent activity. Overall, understanding your credit report is a crucial step in gaining financial confidence.

What Information Is Included in a Credit Report?

You may still be wondering: what is a credit report exactly and how much data does it include? Credit bureaus collect a range of information, from basic, personal data to detailed borrowing history in order to paint a picture of your credit habits. Identification details clarify who you are, where you’ve lived, and a bit about your life. They will list your full name and any alternately used names, your birthday, current and former addresses, social security numbers, and your phone number.

The meat of the credit report includes your account history including the types of credit accounts, how long they’ve been open, and their credit limits. Each month, your balance will rise or fall on your report based on payments or charges. This in turn affects the utilization rate on each card as well. Each account will also note your payment history, noting any late payments for up to around seven years. Your credit report will also include the number of recent hard inquiries, which usually occur when you apply for a new credit card or loan.

Certain public records and legal details — such as lawsuits — may also be listed on your report. It also lists if you’ve filed for bankruptcy, received a tax lien or had a bill sent to a collection agency. Though specifics vary, the majority of these details are wiped from your report after seven years, so there are often ways to improve your credit standing over time.

How Does Information Get on Your Credit Report?

A credit bureau, also known as a credit reporting agency, gathers this information in one place so you don’t have to. Though there are hundreds throughout the world, the three main U.S. reporting agencies are TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian. They receive information via lending companies, courts, and local government to build your credit record. Every month, an assortment of data transfers from these locations to the credit bureau database.

If you open a new credit card, make a purchase on your store card, or pay down a balance, this data is sent to update your report. The agency organizes the data and displays information on your credit report in a clear layout for you or a potential lender to view. This constantly updating system means that your credit score may fluctuate at times. It also allows you to take immediate action on any troublesome accounts or in the case of identity theft.

Why Is It Important to Get a Credit Report?

Credit reports are an excellent tool for guiding large financial decisions. Say you’re looking to purchase a home in the next five years. Your report allows you to fully assess how to raise your score and which credit accounts most strongly affect your overall financial balance. Your report is also a glimpse into why your credit score has remained low or stagnant. It could be helpful to request a report before applying for a new credit card or transitioning to a new phase in life like graduate school.

Checking your credit report at least once a year, even if you are not planning any large financial changes, is often suggested for several reasons. Credit reports allow you to catch any discrepancies either in how your data was reported or if someone attempted to open an account under your name.

Where can you get a free credit report? Free credit report programs, like Turbo, can give you a glimpse into your score and history. If you’re looking to improve your credit score, these tools may be useful for frequent tracking and do not count against your credit as a hard inquiry.

How Does Your Credit Report Impact You?

Potential lenders and employers may check your credit report for the same reason you check in on yourself. Your credit report may signal that you can be trusted to make timely payments and prioritize your financial health. Employers have been known to check credit reports in order to confirm you’re able to stick to contracts and agreements.

Credit reports are most commonly used to determine approval for loans, credit limits, and interest rates. If you have some troubling details on your account, lenders may protect themselves by offering higher interest or lower credit limits until you’ve proven a strong history of payments. On a higher level, credit reports affect your mortgage interest rate or simply your likelihood of being approved for the mortgage in the first place.

In some cases, your credit report could also affect your insurance rates and other monthly bills. Some utility companies and cell phone companies determine offers and down payments based on your credit score. Overall, the healthier your credit report, the more chances you’ll have to practice good borrowing habits with a range of accounts.

A credit report is a detailed tracking tool of your borrowing and repayment history. The greater you understand your credit report, the more it can act as a tool for financial growth. Feeling confident about borrowing and managing debt comes over time, and your credit report is there to help track your progress along the way.

  • Previous Post
    What Percent of Your Income Should Go Towards Rent?

  • Next Post
    Can Gratitude Fix Your Relationship With Money?


Browse by Topic

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally

Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further

“John, I sold some stock and used the proceeds to completely pay off two credit cards.  That takes my credit card debt from almost $17,000 to zero.  It also reduces my debt-to-limit ratio from over 50% to 0%.  Needless to say I’m excited to see what happens to my credit scores as a result. How long will it take for my credit scores to reflect this reduction in debt?”

The answer to this question is actually quite simple and it opens up a topic on which I don’t believe I’ve ever written in my 22 years in the credit industry.

The answer to the reader’s question is that it will likely not take more than one month for your scores to reflect this reduction in debt, and if your timing was good it could take much less than that.

The reason it could take up to one month for your credit scores to reflect the reduction in credit card debt is because it could take up to one month for the credit reports to be updated to show the zero balance on those two credit cards.

Credit scores are 100% dependent on the information in your credit reports, so even though your balances are zero today, your credit reports also have to reflect the zero balances in order for your scores to benefit.

This leads me to the next issue, which is the changing of your credit scores. The question suggests that credit scores change over time as data on your credit report changes.

And while this is a completely reasonable assumption, it’s not actually true. Credit scores do not change over time as your credit report data changes.

Changing Vs. Recalculating

Credit scores are not a part of your credit report. They are not “updated” like, for example, your credit card account is updated.

When your score is calculated for a lender it is not maintained as part of your credit history.

It is calculated, discarded, and then recalculated the next time a lender pulls your credit reports and requests a credit score. So, the answer posed in the title of this article is, “Never.”

Your credit score never changes.

Credit Score Tracking Services

There are websites like Credit Karma that will give away free credit scores and then track them for you over time but that’s different.

The score tracking is one of their features. The credit bureaus don’t track your scores over time as they’re calculated.

If your VantageScore credit score or FICO credit score is 730 on Sunday and 780 the following Sunday, it gives the impression that your score increased by 50 points during the week.

That’s not true. Your score was simply recalculated a week later and the latter scored out at 780 instead of 730.

Why the Numbers Fluctuate

So how do you attribute different scores over time?

There has to be a scientific explanation of why your score was a 730 last Sunday and a 780 this Sunday, and there is.

The difference in scores is likely attributable to one or more credit report and credit scoring model events. Your score could be different because of;

1) Something material changed on your credit reports.

Assuming everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, stayed the same on your credit reports (dates, balances, statuses, composition) except for one significant change, you could argue that the one change is responsible for the difference in scores.

This would have to be validated by manually scoring the credit report before and after the change and measuring the true impact of that one change.

This manual scoring can take several hours and isn’t fun at all. In fact, I just got the chills thinking about doing it.

2) Something seemingly immaterial changed on your credit reports…but it was actually kind of important.

A great example would be a date associated with an account or with something derogatory.

If an account or a derogatory item crossed one of the many thresholds associated with the age metrics of a credit scoring system and all of a sudden became “older,” that could cause a change in score even though cosmetically the credit reports look the same.

3) Your credit report experienced what’s referring to as Scorecard Hop.

Scorecard hop is a non-technical term meaning that something changed on your credit report and it has caused your credit report to be scored using a completely different series of measurements by the scoring model.

Imagine changing the speedometer in your car from Miles Per Hour to Kilometers Per Hour. You’re still going to same speed but the measurement of your speed is very different.

This can be something as minor as a new account hitting the credit report or an ancient collection falling off.

When you scorecard hop EVERY measurement associated with your credit report changes and it’s next to impossible to put your finger on why your scores are different unless you score the credit report manually.

John Ulzheimer is the President of Consumer Education at SmartCredit.com, the credit blogger for Mint.com, and a contributor for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling.  He is an expert on credit reporting, credit scoring and identity theft. Formerly of FICO, Equifax and Credit.com, John is the only recognized credit expert who actually comes from the credit industry. The opinions expressed in his articles are his and not of Mint.com or Intuit. Follow John on Twitter.

Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further

  • Previous Post
    10 Out of the Box Back-to-School Basics

  • Next Post
    The Best Things to Buy in August

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally


©
2023 MintLife Blog.

All rights reserved. Intuit and QuickBooks are registered trademarks of Intuit Inc. Terms and conditions, features, support, pricing, and service options subject to change without notice.

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally


©
2023 MintLife Blog.

All rights reserved. Intuit and QuickBooks are registered trademarks of Intuit Inc. Terms and conditions, features, support, pricing, and service options subject to change without notice.

Source: mint.intuit.com

Apache is functioning normally

Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further

The dreaded credit report. Scary, isn’t it? Much like your “permanent record” in every teen movie, it can often seem like your credit report determines your entire future.

What’s more is that, for most, your credit report is shrouded in mystery. Information surrounding how to access your credit report, what’s included on your credit report, and even what your credit report is used for may feel like a big question mark.

We’re here to demystify credit reports for you. Read on to learn about credit reports, how to access them, and why they’re important.

Have a particular question about the three credit bureaus? Jump to it using the links below:

  1. What is a credit report and why does it matter?
  2. What are credit bureaus?
  3. Where do credit bureaus get their information?
  4. What are the 3 major credit reporting agencies?
  5. How do I get a copy of my free credit report?
  6. What is a credit monitoring agency?
  7. What do I do if my credit report has incorrect information?

What is a credit report and why does it matter?

Before diving into your credit report, it’s important to understand “credit” itself. Most associate credit with credit cards, but “credit” refers to more than that. Any loan you’ve taken is considered credit. That may be a loan in the form of a credit card, which you pay off monthly, or a student loan, car loan or lease, home loan, or any other type of money you’ve borrowed.

A credit report contains information about the historical and current status of all of the above. Creditors (those who lend you money) submit information to credit bureaus, also known as credit reporting agencies, who compile that credit information into your credit report.

Your credit report also may contain the following information:

  • Your personal information, including name, address(es), birthdate, SSN, and phone number(s)
  • Your credit accounts
    • Current and historical credit accounts
    • Creditors name
    • Credit limits
    • Account balance
    • Payment history
  • Your collection items
  • Your public records
    • Liens
    • Foreclosures
    • Bankruptcies
    • Civil suits
  • A list of inquiries – or companies that have accessed your credit report

Typically, negative information like late payments, delinquent accounts, charge offs, and more stay on your credit report for 7 years, and bankruptcies stay for 10.

What are credit bureaus?

Credit bureaus are for-profit companies that aggregate information from creditors, public records, and other companies, and then compile the information into your credit report. These reports are then sold to companies who would like to legally access your credit information, like a landlord or a creditor with whom you’re applying for a loan.

Credit bureaus are not government owned or related to banks in any way. That said, these companies are regulated by the government through a piece of legislation called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).

This act ensures the following:

  • You have the right to request access to your credit report once per year
  • Your credit report can only be accessed by those with a valid need and you have the right to know who accesses your credit report
  • You have the right to dispute anything in your credit report and the credit reporting agency must investigate and remove any inaccurate information
  • Negative information must be removed from your file in 7 years and bankruptcy in 10
  • Your credit report cannot contain medical information
  • You have the right to sue anyone who violates the Fair Credit Reporting Act and seek damages in court
  • And much more

Where do credit bureaus get their information?

Credit bureaus source their information from a number of different sources. First, creditors report your credit information to credit bureaus. This may be a bank or retailer with which you have a credit account or a loan company you’ve borrowed from in the past.

Creditors are not legally required to report information to all three of the major credit reporting agencies, which is why your credit information may vary from report to report. While most of the larger creditors relay your credit information to all three credit bureaus, smaller creditors may only relay their information to one.

Credit bureaus also source their information from debt collectors and public reports, like bankruptcies, liens, or court records.

What are the 3 major credit reporting agencies?

While the market used to be full of numerous credit reporting agencies, these days it’s dominated by 3 major credit bureaus: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.

As separate companies, credit bureaus don’t share information between each other, which is why your credit report may vary slightly from company to company. Each bureau collects its own information with slightly different focuses.

How do I get a copy of my free credit report?

The Fair Credit Reporting Act entitles you to one free credit report from each of the three major credit reporting bureaus each year.

But for many, accessing that credit report can feel like an impossible task. A quick search for credit report in any major search engine bombards you with credit reports for purchase.

In order to access your free annual credit report from each bureau, simply go to the aptly named www.annualcreditreport.com, or call (877) 322-8228. With a bit of identifying information, including your name, address, date of birth, and SSN, you’ll have your credit report in no time.

You may get all three of your free reports at once, or space them out as you choose—just remember that your information may vary from report to report.

For example, a report you access today from TransUnion may feature a particular blemish. When you download a separate credit report from Equifax 4 months later, you may no longer see that blemish on your report.

This may give you the false sense that the blemish has reached its full lifespan and fallen off your report. In reality, however, the blemish may have never existed on your Equifax report to begin with. It may, therefore be best to view all 3 in tandem.

What is a credit monitoring agency?

A credit monitoring agency or credit monitoring service is used to track an individual’s credit reports and scores and notify the individual of any changes. This may include the addition of new accounts or an inquiry into their credit report.

Credit monitoring agencies’ primary function is to monitor for illegal activity, such as identity theft. A criminal may open new credit accounts or make large purchases that require credit checks in your name, causing lasting damage to your credit report.

However, many offer additional services, including extensive credit score tracking and scans for personal information, including bank and social security information, across the web.

What do I do if my credit report has incorrect information?

If you spot incorrect information on your credit report, it’s important to dispute it.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act states that both the creditor and credit bureau are responsible for correcting inaccurate information, but they largely leave it in your hands to identify.

If you find inaccurate information, you may write a dispute letter to the credit bureau identifying the issue and explaining the dispute. You can also do this online at each credit reporting agency’s website, or file a dispute directly with the creditor who originally reported the wrong information.

Include documentation that supports your dispute and keep copies of everything for yourself.

Want to see a dispute in action? Let’s take a closer look at TransUnion’s dispute process, as TransUnion’s credit report is what Turbo uses to give you insight into your financial health.

You can file a dispute (fee-free) by phone, mail, or online.

Upon receiving your request, TransUnion initiates an investigation of any credit information that you are disputing. TransUnion may then alter your credit report based on the information you’ve provided, or contact the company that reported the information you’re disputing.

TransUnion will supply the company with any documentation you provided, along with any necessary supplemental information. The company is instructed to review the dispute, verify their information, provide a response, and update their records accordingly.

If you initiated your dispute using their online form, you’ll be notified via email when results are available online. If you initiated your dispute via mail or phone, you will receive results by mail.

Bottom Line

While most of the information collected by the three separate credit bureaus is similar, there are key differences to keep in mind when requesting a credit report.

Your information may vary between credit reporting agency, but it’s important to keep an eye out for errors and file a dispute if anything seems awry with your report.

Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further

  • Previous Post
    #RealMoneyTalk: How to Have the Gift Giving Talk with Your…

  • Next Post
    Tax Reform & Student Loan Debt: What You Need To…

Mint is passionate about helping you to achieve financial goals through education and with powerful tools, personalized insights, and much more. More from Mint

Source: mint.intuit.com