Credit card pay off?

Disneylover79

<font color=darkorchid>I'm a cheap date!<br><font
Joined
Jul 23, 2007
Messages
3,023
I have heard from many people to not close your credit care but to only pay it way down...is this true... I start my new job (promotion) tomorrow and I am already planning for my first paycheck....TIA
 
Part of your credit score calculation involves the ratio of your debt (amount you owe) to the amount of credit you have (total of all of the credit limits of all of your cards). Thus, if you pay off your card and close your account, the amount of credit you have gets reduced so this ratio can go up - that's bad for your credit score. For example, if you owe $5000 on card #1 with a $25,000 credit limit and owe $10000 on card #2 with a $20,000 limit your debt to credit ratio is $15,000/$45,000 which equals 33%. If you pay off card #1 and close the account, your ratio changes to $10,000/$20,000 which equals 50%. This is bad for you. I don't know how much this affects the score but it does matter.

Also, the longer you have an account the more "weight" it carries. Keep accounts open that you've had for a long time and pay them off.
 
Congratulations on your promotion!:wizard:

You do want to establish some credit. Use your credit card for some monthly bills, and pay it off immediately. We use automatic payments to ensure we never miss a month using online banking.

Our credit score is 875 which puts us in a very high ranking. The highest is 925. If you miss payments it stays on your record for 7 years.

Good luck!
 
Keep in mind, BTW, that your statement balance is what shows as used credit on your credit report. So even if you pay your credit card bill in full each month, unless you pay it before the date your statement posts, you'll look as though you carry a balance when your credit score is calculated. DH and I get nailed by that constantly - biggest negative on our credit score is high revolving balance. We don't carry one! BUT the way the companies calculate it, they think we do. :rotfl:

As for credit, I think it is a necessary evil to cultivate a reasonable credit score, at least until you have heaping gobs of money in the bank and won't need to borrow for car/home/etc. Even insurance companies - and employers! - check your credit these days.
 

Our credit score is 875 which puts us in a very high ranking. The highest is 925. If you miss payments it stays on your record for 7 years. Good luck!
As was pointed out in another thread, the score you are mentioning isn't a FICO score (which is, I believe, the one many creditors use). FICO scores don't go above 850, I believe. Anything in the 800's for a true FICO is nice....very, very nice. :thumbsup2

If I were wanting to find out my credit score, I'd definitely go to myfico.com, not get it from Transunion or whomever. Those scores are hard to compare across the board - it'll give you an idea of your percentile, but I don't think it is what creditors will be looking at if you try to take out a loan or something.
 
As was pointed out in another thread, the score you are mentioning isn't a FICO score (which is, I believe, the one many creditors use). FICO scores don't go above 850, I believe. Anything in the 800's for a true FICO is nice....very, very nice. :thumbsup2

If I were wanting to find out my credit score, I'd definitely go to myfico.com, not get it from Transunion or whomever. Those scores are hard to compare across the board - it'll give you an idea of your percentile, but I don't think it is what creditors will be looking at if you try to take out a loan or something.

Thanks! 811 with myfico. So I am happy. We had several late payments 6 years ago and one 2 years ago. That's the blight in our credit history.

Will those late payements ever go away? I could see them flagged on our fico credit report.
 
I have heard from many people to not close your credit care but to only pay it way down...is this true... I start my new job (promotion) tomorrow and I am already planning for my first paycheck....TIA

It's funny though. I have a pretty good credit rating (770 which is suppose to be ok) but they mentioned that one of the "negatives" were a lot of opened accounts even when the balance is zero. Now I don't go around opening accounts but I am middle age so I've had time to accrue a card or two. :lmao:

Some have been around for 25 years and still opened.
 
It's funny though. I have a pretty good credit rating (770 which is suppose to be ok) but they mentioned that one of the "negatives" were a lot of opened accounts even when the balance is zero. Now I don't go around opening accounts but I am middle age so I've had time to accrue a card or two. :lmao:

Some have been around for 25 years and still opened.
I think it has to say something to explain why you don't have a perfect score, so when your score is very good, it gets nit-picky. :confused3

As for FICO scores, I thought when you purchased you got both scores. I know mine were quite a bit different when I last purchased them - it was really remarkable when there were three scores how different they could be!

To Ka' eo : As for the late payments you mentioned above, first - I'm impressed by your numbers despite the late payments you mentioned being flagged for. The one score you posted is remarkably good given the negatives in your payment history. In point of fact, I have never even heard of someone with such negs with an 800+ score in all my browsing around the fico forums at myfico.com! You must be doing something right in order to have such a high score in spite of them.

As for when they will fall off, I don't know. I know BK and such stay a certain number of years, but I think cards can stay on 10 years or something like that, so if it is a current account it may stay on a very long time. Still, as I said above, whatever you are doing is obviously working - any other person I have seen post with an 800+ score has an unblemished credit history, and even then it often apparently takes a very long time to get to the 800's since history/average length of accounts apparently plays a fairly big role in FICO score calcs.
 
Well I just talked to my dh and those 3 late payments were on my cards and my score is 781. My husband's is 811. I was watching the olympics and not paying attention! He's happy his score is better than mine..... Fitting, really as he is a much more disciplined person than I.

Thanks for the tips!
 
It's funny though. I have a pretty good credit rating (770 which is suppose to be ok) but they mentioned that one of the "negatives" were a lot of opened accounts even when the balance is zero. Now I don't go around opening accounts but I am middle age so I've had time to accrue a card or two. :lmao:

Some have been around for 25 years and still opened.


They also look at your available credit in relation to your income. If you have, say, 75K in available credit and you income is only 50K, that is a negative.

I guess they're thinking you could run out on a shopping spree and spend 75K and not be able to pay it off?
 
We just refinanced (4.37% :banana:) and our credit scores were both over 800. Yeah!

We have credit cards but don't owe on any of them....we pay off any balances each month.

Dawn

As was pointed out in another thread, the score you are mentioning isn't a FICO score (which is, I believe, the one many creditors use). FICO scores don't go above 850, I believe. Anything in the 800's for a true FICO is nice....very, very nice. :thumbsup2

If I were wanting to find out my credit score, I'd definitely go to myfico.com, not get it from Transunion or whomever. Those scores are hard to compare across the board - it'll give you an idea of your percentile, but I don't think it is what creditors will be looking at if you try to take out a loan or something.
 
We just refinanced (4.37% :banana:) and our credit scores were both over 800. Yeah!

We have credit cards but don't owe on any of them....we pay off any balances each month.

Dawn
Oh, so jealous about the interest rate! I keep thinking of doing a refi on our home, but when I run the numbers I'm not sure how much it will save us or how long it will take us to recoup the cost.

And boy, I suppose a good FICO score helps with getting a good rate. :rotfl:

To the OP, check out the forums at myfico.com as they contain detailed info about what factors affect your FICO score and such. Interesting reading if you're trying to improve your score!
 
Well I just talked to my dh and those 3 late payments were on my cards and my score is 781. My husband's is 811. I was watching the olympics and not paying attention! He's happy his score is better than mine..... Fitting, really as he is a much more disciplined person than I.

Thanks for the tips!

They (the lates) usually (suppose to) fall off after 7 years. As they get older they really don't affect your score as much.
 
They also look at your available credit in relation to your income. If you have, say, 75K in available credit and you income is only 50K, that is a negative.

I guess they're thinking you could run out on a shopping spree and spend 75K and not be able to pay it off?

So it's a no win situation. If I have too many open it doesn't look good and if I start closing them it looks bad. :confused3
 
ok here is the thing most people dont tell you about your fico score if you dont stay in hawk your score goes down

everyone doesnt start off at 800 and go down if they are bad risk, this is why i hate fico.

I like not owing people money so i dont have a great score 620 some thing, couple of times late on the credit card you late by one day they report it to be a 1-30 day late but in 20 years i have only bought 1 house (6.25 30 year fixed repo house got awsome deal 210k house for 128k go me) and 2 cars(12% 5 year ouchee and 8.30% 5 year) on credit had one credit card .

the only good thing about about a good fico score is lower month payments and lower interest rates but you can have that with bigger cash deposit or here is what i do i didnt want to pay 12% interest on the car so i started throwing money at it, payment where still high but it was payed off in 3yrs, and i didnt pay the full 12% interest more like 7.

I like cash better, then debt, just me but im not a dave ramsey crazy too,(sorry) but dave does have a point, you pay interest to play the fico game.
 
I found out a few months ago that my score is 725, which I thought was pretty good. But it seems like a lot of my fellow Disers have scores in the 800s. I have never had a late payment, and have a couple credit cards and rarely pay interest. I've had a mortgage for 6 years and a few cars financed.
I am 26. Is my age the reason my score isn't higher? I hope some of you are older than me, and that's why you have awesome scores.... .and I don't :sad1:
 
ok here is the thing most people dont tell you about your fico score if you dont stay in hawk your score goes down
I honestly haven't observed this. DH and I got our first mortgage ~4 years ago - the home we owned prior, we bought outright. Our only debt between us at that point (when we applied for the mortgage) was my student loan. No credit card debt, no car loans, so we had very little debt. DH had no student loans, no nothing, and yet his credit score was higher than mine at that time. :confused3

I like not owing people money so i dont have a great score 620 some thing, couple of times late on the credit card you late by one day they report it to be a 1-30 day late but in 20 years i have only bought 1 house (6.25 30 year fixed repo house got awsome deal 210k house for 128k go me) and 2 cars(12% 5 year ouchee and 8.30% 5 year) on credit had one credit card .
I like not owing people too. :lmao: And we don't - our only debt is now our "30-year" mortgage, which we have ~19 years remaining on after just over four years in this home. Our FICO scores are pretty decent despite not having lots of debt.

the only good thing about about a good fico score is lower month payments and lower interest rates but you can have that with bigger cash deposit or here is what i do i didnt want to pay 12% interest on the car so i started throwing money at it, payment where still high but it was payed off in 3yrs, and i didnt pay the full 12% interest more like 7.
A good FICO score also helps with your insurance rates, with background checks with employers (some do pull your credit now, especially depending on the field), and in the long run, if you need a loan, it can save you lots.

As for your loan, I would guess you did pay 12% interest, you just paid it for three years instead of five or whatever was originally planned. I believe the amount you mentioned was an annual percentage rate, meaning you pay 12% of whatever you owe per year. Of course, it's more complicated than that, but I don't think you lower your interest RATE by paying it off faster, I think you just lower how long you paid it or how much you paid in interest.

I like cash better, then debt, just me but im not a dave ramsey crazy too,(sorry) but dave does have a point, you pay interest to play the fico game.
You absolutely do not have to pay interest to play the FICO "game". Only once in the last 10 years have I paid interest on a credit card - we had solar panels installed on our home, and were called out of the blue to purchase them as they were backordered forever. We didn't have $12K sitting around in checking at that moment, and had to charge it and, sadly, carry part of it for one month until we freed up the money to pay them off completely. It still ticks me off that we spent ~$200 in interest, but in the long run it was better than possibly waiting months and months for the panels. :mad:
 
I found out a few months ago that my score is 725, which I thought was pretty good. But it seems like a lot of my fellow Disers have scores in the 800s. I have never had a late payment, and have a couple credit cards and rarely pay interest. I've had a mortgage for 6 years and a few cars financed.
I am 26. Is my age the reason my score isn't higher? I hope some of you are older than me, and that's why you have awesome scores.... .and I don't :sad1:
It probably has to do with your average account age more than your age. ;) But yes, I think it's harder to have a high FICO score when you are younger unless you were/are an authorized cardholder on your parents account or something. You'll get there as long as you continue to be responsible. :thumbsup2
 
They also look at your available credit in relation to your income. If you have, say, 75K in available credit and you income is only 50K, that is a negative.

I guess they're thinking you could run out on a shopping spree and spend 75K and not be able to pay it off?

No where on your credit report is your income listed. Having 75K AVAILABLE on a 50K income is most certainly NOT a negative when it comes to factoring FICO scores.
 
No where on your credit report is your income listed. Having 75K AVAILABLE on a 50K income is most certainly NOT a negative when it comes to factoring FICO scores.
I am sure when someone is considering loaning money income is a factor, but I agree with wvjules - I don't believe your income factors into your FICO score.
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer

New Posts







DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom