Bellex917
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2019
- Messages
- 457
I have found that some creditors will close an account if there is no activity over a period of time, and closing an account if it is your longest history of credit OR a majority of your available credit can definitely hurt.That's just what I had heard. But I don't think that's necessarily true. I hadn't charged on my card with the AF since September, and it hadn't closed. But there'd always been a balance. Now there's no balance, I'm not sure how it works. I need to Google it. You might be correct.
This comes from experience. Last time I closed a paid off a CC and closed it, my score plummeted because my credit utilization dropped so much. I've been working for 3 years now to get my score out of the deep freeze from when it dropped so much. It's plummets so much, and it's such a long process to get it back.
Honestly, if it was me, I'd send one small bill there automatically each month (like my Netflix or something) and then set up autopay so that bill is paid in full each month. Set it and forget it. I think you're right not to close them since you're working to repair your credit, as long as you KNOW you won't use them for frivolous purchases.

but up through a handful of years ago when I still had one in college and we were dealing with all the education credits and such I had used cpa's to do our taxes since we first married. I don't know that I would still do it if we had to file state taxes but with just the fed it's not too bad (and the new senior citizen version of the 1040 I qualify to use after this year looks pretty streamlined).