china mom
Happy people ain't haters & haters ain't happy
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2010
- Messages
- 2,570
I am curious and hope someone who understands how credit scores are calculated can help me.
My credit score dipped due to another hard inquiry. I understand that dip as I have made a home purchase and a couple of refinances in the past 12 months (not all the same house). But one of my factors is this:
Open real estate account balances are too high compared to their loan amounts.
A real estate loan can be a first mortgage, a home equity loan or home equity line of credit. The outstanding balances on open real estate accounts remain high compared to the original loan amounts. People who haven't paid down much of their mortgage or other real estate loans are higher credit risks than people who have.
My question is this. When I do a refinance, I assume that it is resetting my "original loan balance" to the amount of the refinance. So, even if I am not taking any additional cash out, it still looks like I haven't paid down the loan. Am I understanding this correctly?
Hypothetical...I purchase a house for $150K, pay on it for 10 years and my balance is $100K. I refinance the $100K and now my credit dips because I still owe $100K on the $100K loan?
I am not worried about it because my credit is still excellent but I am curios because I have refinanced before and didn't see a dip like this and the refinance I am doing right now hasn't even closed yet.
My credit score dipped due to another hard inquiry. I understand that dip as I have made a home purchase and a couple of refinances in the past 12 months (not all the same house). But one of my factors is this:
Open real estate account balances are too high compared to their loan amounts.
A real estate loan can be a first mortgage, a home equity loan or home equity line of credit. The outstanding balances on open real estate accounts remain high compared to the original loan amounts. People who haven't paid down much of their mortgage or other real estate loans are higher credit risks than people who have.
My question is this. When I do a refinance, I assume that it is resetting my "original loan balance" to the amount of the refinance. So, even if I am not taking any additional cash out, it still looks like I haven't paid down the loan. Am I understanding this correctly?
Hypothetical...I purchase a house for $150K, pay on it for 10 years and my balance is $100K. I refinance the $100K and now my credit dips because I still owe $100K on the $100K loan?
I am not worried about it because my credit is still excellent but I am curios because I have refinanced before and didn't see a dip like this and the refinance I am doing right now hasn't even closed yet.