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What Is a Good Credit Score? The Number You Need to Buy a Home
Realtor.com ^ | June 9, 2016 | Daniel Bortz

Posted on 06/09/2016 10:03:29 PM PDT by Graybeard58

No number is more important to prospective home buyers than their credit score. Put simply, these three digits are a numerical representation of your track record paying off your debts, from credit cards to college loans. If you’ve applied for a mortgage to buy a home, lenders check your credit score. If it’s high, getting a mortgage will be a breeze; if it’s low, you may struggle.

So now that we’ve got your attention, the question remains: Exactly what is a good credit score?

Here’s the deal: A perfect credit score is 850. But all scores 760 and above are considered to be in the best credit score range. Since this means you’ve shown an excellent ability to pay off your past debts, mortgage lenders want your business—and will try to entice you by offering loans with the lowest interest rates, says Richard Redmond, mortgage broker at All California Mortgage in Larkspur and author of “Mortgages: The Insider’s Guide.”

A good score is from 700 to 759; a fair score is from 650 to 699. Since a lower score means you’ve had some late payments or other dings on your credit history, lenders see you as more likely to default on your home loan. They may still give you a mortgage, but at a higher interest rate, says Bill Hardekopf, a credit expert at LowCards.com.

Credit scores below 650 are deemed poor, meaning your credit history has had some rough patches. This doesn’t necessarily mean you can’t qualify for a loan, but it may be tough, and you’ll pay a higher interest rate for the privilege.

How credit scores are calculated

Three major U.S. credit bureaus track and tally your scores: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. Their scores should be roughly similar, although each pulls from slightly different sources (Experian looks at rent payments while TransUnion checks out your employment history). But by and large, here are the main variables that determine your score, and to what degree: •Payment history (35%): This is whether you’ve made debt payments on time. If you’ve never missed a payment, a 30-day delinquency can cause as much as a 90- to 110-point drop in your score.

•Debt-to-credit utilization (30%): This is how much debt you’ve accumulated on your credit card accounts, divided by the credit limit on the sum of your accounts. Ratios above 30% work against you. So if you have a total credit limit of $5,000, you will want to be in debt no more than $1,500 when you apply for a mortgage.

•Length of credit history (15%): It’s beneficial to have a track record of being a responsible credit user. A longer credit history boosts your score. CreditKarma.com, a credit-monitoring service, found that its members with scores above 750 have an average credit history of 7.5 years.

•Credit mix (10%): Your credit score ticks up if you have a rich combination of different types of credit accounts, such as credit cards, retail store credit cards, installment loans, and a previous mortgage.

•New credit (10%): Research shows that opening several new credit accounts within a short period of time represents greater risk to the mortgage lender, according to myFICO.com, so avoid applying for new credit accounts if you’re about to buy a home. Also, each time you open a new credit account, the average length of your credit history decreases (further hurting your credit score).

How to check your credit score

You can check your own credit report—and should, because it will help you pinpoint areas for improvement. Even if you’re fairly sure you’ve never made a late payment, one in four Americans finds errors on his credit report, according to a 2013 Federal Trade Commission survey.

Errors are common because creditors make mistakes reporting customer slip-ups. For example, although you may have never missed a payment, someone with the same name as you did—and your bank recorded the error on your account by accident.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News
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To: upchuck

“God has been good to me.”

Understatement in my case.....considering my youthful transgressions...


21 posted on 06/10/2016 5:54:46 AM PDT by litehaus (A memory toooo long)
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To: Graybeard58

I know a lady whose husband abandoned her and her daughter and ran off with a stripper. The divorce financially devastated her. Her house went to foreclosure and she had to declare bankruptcy.

The last time I saw her she told me that her credit score had incredibly skyrocketed to 780. Being freed from the debt trap the banks just could not wait to reel her back in.

Dave Ramsey is right. Your credit score is nothing but a measure of how well you kiss a*s to the banks. Worry about the basics, not this score.


22 posted on 06/10/2016 6:17:50 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: firebrand

About 15 years ago, I had similar problems with the cable bill and a credit card bill. Each was supposed to have about a 25 day grace period. But, they wouldn't even mail the bill until about 2 weeks into that. It would several days to arrive. By the time I would have returned them (one 3-day weekend), they would be late.

I noticed in some online forums that many people were complaining of similar problems with bills and payments.

When online bill paying started, I pay every bill the very day they get the current bill posted.

I used to have auto-pay on a few accounts, but they would put a hold on the amount on my credit card, but not actually pay it until the end of the grace period. One month, I had a foreigner who used my number for some purchases. My credit card company called me about the unusual purchases -- airline tickets between Turkey and Dubai. They cancelled that card number and issued me a new card number.

That created new problems. Those auto-pays would not let me change the to the new number, because there as a charge pending. I had to wait for the cycle to complete, and get a 'card number rejected' and hit with a late fee, before I would chance out the old number with the new. I dropped auto-pay immediately thereafter.


23 posted on 06/10/2016 6:34:27 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Graybeard58
Mortgage brokers tell me the best way to get your score up is the keep credit cards for long term. The longer you have a bank issued credit card, the more your score goes up. Don't trade in your long term cards for new ones to pay the balance, real bad when you have credit cards that are only a few years old.

And never buy anything big, appliance, car, tv while in escrow. I know of a couple that went to HOme Depot while in escrow and purchased appliances on credit, the house they were buying had none. They did not get the loan as their ratios changed that much having new credit.

Wells Fargo Bank has lowered their scores to 620, it makes me so mad, they are not qualified with that kind of score.

24 posted on 06/10/2016 6:50:57 AM PDT by thirst4truth (America, What difference does it make?)
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To: Fai Mao
I am not sure we even have a credit rating.

I'm sure I don't have one. No plastic.

I own a number of houses, all fsbo's. A few rules of thumb:

Don't even look at anything requiring a bank mortgage.
Don't count on a property generating income.
Look for properties at tax sales, and look for fsbo's, and if financing has to happen, go with seller financing. Avoid properties listed with a realtor.


I've been doing this for a few years (while my friends have been drinking and wenching through college). I've never had to lay out more than $2k for anything, up front. How am I doing? Let's just say it's "lucrative." :)

25 posted on 06/10/2016 6:51:46 AM PDT by Buttons12 ( It Can't Happen Here -- Sinclair Lewis.)
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To: refermech
I have a lousy credit rating. I buy everything cash.

Dave Ramsey teaches credit classes, he says that since he is all cash all the time, he would not qualify to rent an apartment, but he has enough money to buy the apartment.

26 posted on 06/10/2016 6:53:38 AM PDT by thirst4truth (America, What difference does it make?)
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To: Graybeard58

You need a minimum FICO score of 620 to qualify for a VA mortgage loan.


27 posted on 06/10/2016 7:23:06 AM PDT by sergeantdave ( If not you, who? If not now, when?)
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To: Graybeard58

The perfect borrower, you are. Once you can prove you don’t need the loan, lenders are pounding you with offers.


28 posted on 06/10/2016 8:35:28 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: Lockbox
Actually, not. I have a friend in the rental business who makes his real money by offering his most responsible lenders the option to buy where he makes the most serious money as a mortgage broker.

Some lenders LOVE responsible people on public assistance for two reasons: (a)their source of income is considered more stable than those with crappy jobs, (b)brownie points from Fedzilla for getting them into homes and extra brownie points if they are a favored minority group.

"Responsible people on public assistance" sounds like an oxymoron, but there are some of them out there who don't spend all the spare change which they have on booze, drugs, smokes, lottery tickets, premium cable packages and the like.

29 posted on 06/10/2016 8:43:17 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: Graybeard58

Paid off the credit cards, the mortgage, the car. Got a fantastic credit rating now that I no longer have the slightest intention of using it. I just wish they’d leave me alone. Do I have to get back in debt for that?


30 posted on 06/10/2016 8:47:19 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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. . . his most responsible lendersrenters . . .

Sorry!

31 posted on 06/10/2016 8:47:20 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: RipSawyer
In your situation it would not matter if it were 850 or zero!

Not necessarily so. A good credit score also gets you better insurance rates. Just like with the bank; it shows the insurance company you are either responsible or not or just so so.

32 posted on 06/10/2016 9:03:34 AM PDT by Boomer (liberalism is a mental disease with no cure but a frontal lobotomy will make them less of a jerk.)
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To: Buttons12
Avoid properties listed with a realtor.

Yeah, can't steal anything from THEM, right? < /sarc >

33 posted on 06/10/2016 10:26:36 AM PDT by JimRed (Is it 1776 yet? TERM LIMITS, now and forever! Build the Wall, NOW!)
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To: Fai Mao

#2 You do not have good credit in the eyes of the credit card companies if you do not keep those 10%, 20% 30% cards. You get dinged points by getting 0% cards for a year then cutting them up after the year to get new 0% cards. They ding you for having others check your rating when you get a car or home.


34 posted on 06/10/2016 10:48:05 AM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: Graybeard58

Go to http://www.credit.com for a really free report.
They update once a month.


35 posted on 06/10/2016 10:50:28 AM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: trebb

We’re retired, own everything we have and can pay directly for anything we want/need - with no reason for a loan.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

That’s where my wife and I are but last year, in November, we cashed a check from Capital One for $905.00, for cash back points. 01.5% for purchases. Our new balance on points is up to $285.00 now. Around Christmas time in 2017 we’ll cash in again, should be over $1,000 by then. We never have paid a cent in interest.

The banks charge merchants a minimum of 03%, so we both are making money.

I tried to buy a new car on the credit card and pay it off at the end of the month but the dealer wouldn’t go for it.


36 posted on 06/10/2016 10:54:44 AM PDT by Graybeard58 (Crooked Hillary's going down and I aint talkin about, on Huma.)
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To: Lockbox

When someone lists their EBT card as a source of income, they may not qualify for a loan.


Don’t be so sure of yourself. Govt. welfare is a VERY steady source of income.


37 posted on 06/10/2016 1:27:42 PM PDT by cornfedcowboy
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To: utahagen

Each month I contact the company by phone, and authorize them to take a certain amount out of my checking account.

I’ve been doing this for over a decade without any problems.

I connect to Capital One and authorize them to take the money a couple of days before the due date.

With any of the companies, the day before is fine, but I like to provide more time than that. That being said, I have also made payments on the due date with no problem. As long as I authorize the payment before their cut-off, they’re fine with it.

I don’t used the mail for bills. I just don’t trust it, when it comes to timelines and due dates.


38 posted on 06/10/2016 1:45:16 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (He wins & we do, our nation does, the world does. It's morning in America again. You are living it!)
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To: utahagen

Error:

“Each month I contact the company by phone, and authorize them to take a certain amount out of my checking account.”

I don’t contact them by phone. I seldom talk to them unless I have a problem. I meant contact them over the internet.


39 posted on 06/10/2016 1:46:34 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (He wins & we do, our nation does, the world does. It's morning in America again. You are living it!)
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To: Vigilanteman; cornfedcowboy

Let me get this correct, someone can make enough on Federal and State Assistance to qualify for a home mortgage? Wow! No wonder 94 million Americans have stopped looking for a job!


40 posted on 06/10/2016 2:22:43 PM PDT by Lockbox
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