IDoDis
Knows the password to get into the Moose Lodge
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2006
- Messages
- 5,567
It may be helpful to give someone a general idea of where they are, credit-wise, but nothing beats the hard copies to find out if anything is inaccurate, not yours, potentially fraudulent, etc.
There's a difference between a credit report and a credit score. Everyone should view their credit report at least yearly. Many don't know their actual credit score though, because it's not free and requires an additional charge or you have to pay some kind of monthly fee.
The link I referenced above has no strings attached. It gives you a grade for the following areas:
Payment History (35%)
Debt Usage (30%)
Credit Age (15%)
Account Mix (10%)
Inquiries (10%)
It also gives you estimated credit score ranges for FICO, VantageScore, PLUS Score, TransUnion Score and CreditXpert Score.
It tells you how many years of credit history you have (the actual month and year of when you first established credit) , how old your youngest and oldest accounts are, and the average age of all credit accounts. It also tells you how many years of on-time payments you've had and how many late payments past 30 days.
It tells you how many revolving accounts you have, how many mortgages, auto loans, and student loans.
It gives you a percentage for your debt-to-limit ratio, your total in credit card debts at the time you run the report, and how many accounts have a balance on them.
It tells you how many inquiries happened within the last year, how many older inquiries there are, and the date of the last inquiry.
Each section also gives you tips for keeping your score high or how to raise it for each area that you're given a grade on.
I think it's a very useful tool and it was interesting to run and see all of the numbers.