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Building Good Credit
more detail information about credit management at our
affiliated site: SayGoodCredit.com
Step 1: Pay Your Bills on Time
- Make it your personal goal to pay
your credit and other obligations on time and
for the required amount each month.
- Debt obligations will include:
- credit card charges
- loan payments
- rent or mortgage payments
- utility bills
- service or product bills
- taxes
- support payments
- other
- Take advantage of automatic payments
and other online bill payment strategies offered
by lenders and credit card issuers. This will ensure
timely payments.
If you forget to make a payment, act promptly on any
notices of non- or late payments. Call the bill servicer
to notify them that your payment will be sent immediately.
Do not ignore any creditor notices
of non-payment. Contact the creditor to fix
the problem.
Step 2: Build a Strong Payment
Pattern
- Adverse conditions such as late
or non-payments are two of the most common
items that are reported to the credit agencies.
- You can avoid adverse conditions by making on-time
payments.
- Your credit report will also list all open credit
cards and loans, listing the amount borrowed and the
amount owned on the account.
Your objective is to build a pattern
where you payoff large credit card balances in full
each month.
This pattern conveys a sense of responsibility for
your debt obligations.
- You can build a strong payment
pattern by charging everyday living expenses on your credit card, deducting the charge from your
money account, and then paying off the monthly credit
card charge in full each month with your money deductions.
- You can download FREE an outline
plan that describes how to account for everyday
purchases. The plan uses rebate credit cards to maximize
your rebate options.
Click
here to download plan
- Important Note: you need
to follow these rules before you undertake this credit
payment pattern:
- you must set aside funds for every credit card purchase you make
- you must pay your credit
card balance in full each month
- you must have an existing
credit line or home equity line (with lower
interest rate) to finance large ticket items —
never finance purchases with your credit cards
Step 3: Maintain only a Few
Credit Cards
- As your credit rating improves, you will soon receive pre-approved offers from credit
card companies and lenders with attractive rates and
programs.
- You should limit your credit to 3-4 cards maximum. Maintaining a large collection
of cards can hurt your credit rating.
Step 4: Close All Retail and
Gas Cards
- Since you maintain 3-4 credit cards (VISA, MasterCard,
Discover, American Express, or other), it
isn't necessary to hold gasoline cards, retail store
cards, and other specialized credit cards. Simply use your credit card.
- Again, holding multiple cards can drag down your
credit score.
Step 5: Don't Have Too Many
Outstanding Loans
Step 6: Avoid Charging Close
to Your Credit Line Limit
- Using your credit up to your
maximum credit line balance can impact your
credit rating.
- Maximized credit lines (including home equity lines,
credit cards and unsecured credit lines) indicate
that you are a consumer who borrows willingly. Many lenders consider this a great risk and may not
approve you for additional credit.
- A good rule to follow is to keep
your balances at or below 60 percent of the available
credit line.
Step 7: Review Your Credit Report
Annually
- About 1-in-4 credit reports have
errors. Either a payment on a loan amount has
not been recorded correctly or another billing company
has posted an incorrect non-payment information to
your account.
- Your credit report also maintains records on your
employment, salary, bank accounts, etc., especially
the information that you supplied when making a previous
credit application.
- You should review your report
annually for errors and make the necessary
corrections as instructed by the credit agency.
Link to: reviewing
your credit report
Step 8: Limit Inquiries on Your
Credit Report
- Every time you apply for credit, seek some kind
on contractual service, or in some cases employment, a credit inquiry will be made on
your report.
- Multiple inquiries over a period
of time may impact your credit score.
- Models show that multiple inquiries over a period
of time indicate an applicant who is anticipating
credit problems. So limit credit
inquiries when only necessary.
- What about having multiple lenders
compete for your loan?
Many Internet services and brokers allow you to submit one form
and have up to four lenders review your credit information.
Credit agencies understand that these services may
require an inquiry by "multiple lenders"
at the same time.
These kind of inquiries, coming
from multiple lenders within 20-30 days of each other,
indicate that you are shopping for the best deal. Credit agencies will count these inquiries
as being only one inquiry. This allows you to shop
and negotiate best deal without being penalized on
your credit report.
Additional Information about Maintain Good
Credit at our affiliated site: SayGoodCredit.com
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