For
the past five years, my FICO credit score has been above 825. This
month, I checked my credit score again, as I do annually, and it dropped
to the 755 range. Nothing has changed, except that I applied for and
received six new credit cards in less than three months. They all are
cash-back rewards cards. What happened?
-- Pat
-- Pat
Dear Pat,
Your FICO credit score fell because you opened those six credit cards in a short time. Every time you open an account, you're allowing creditors to pull your credit report, and you're lowering the average age of your credit accounts.
Your FICO credit score fell because you opened those six credit cards in a short time. Every time you open an account, you're allowing creditors to pull your credit report, and you're lowering the average age of your credit accounts.
Both of those actions will sink your score.
Here's
how it works: When you apply for a new credit card, a lender will pull
your credit report and score. This is called a "hard" credit inquiry,
and it'll hurt your score. (It doesn't hurt your score, by the way, when
you pull your own credit report. It also doesn't hurt when an employer
pulls your credit report or when a lender pulls your credit report for
marketing purposes. Those are called "soft" inquiries.)
If
you have several hard credit inquiries in a short amount of time, the
damage to your credit score increases dramatically, says Anthony
Sprauve, spokesman for myFICO.com, the consumer education division of
FICO.
"Our
data shows that someone opening multiple credit accounts in a short
period of time is at a higher risk for default," he says.
It's
unclear how much a hard inquiry -- or several of them -- will hurt your
credit score. It depends on the cardholder, Sprauve says. Typically,
the higher your credit score, the harder it gets hit by any credit
transgression, he says. Consumers with low credit scores will find that a
hard inquiry doesn't hurt their already low credit score by the same
amount.
The
damage from these hard inquiries will lessen over time as long as you
manage the new credit responsibly. That means paying your bills on time
and keeping the balances below 20 percent of the total available credit,
Sprauve says.
New
credit accounts also hurt your FICO credit score by lowering the
average length of your overall credit history. The average age of all
your accounts, the age of individual accounts and the length of time
since you used certain accounts all contribute 15 percent to your FICO
credit score. As the accounts age, and if you manage them responsibly,
those new accounts will eventually boost your credit score.
So
be careful with those credit card offers. While it's attractive to sign
up for rewards credit cards, especially since many of them offer cash
bonuses for new cardholders, do so with prudence and only when you need
new credit.
"In
addition to paying bills on time and keeping revolving credit balances
low," Sprauve says, "the third most important thing a person can do to
improve their credit is only open new accounts when necessary."
Source: Yahoo Finance
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