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Studies have shown that people generally maintain a business relationship with their first card issuer for 15 years, which is why creditors want to get customers when they are young. The relationship lasts so long because the young consumer doesn’t know how to find better deals.
Many people are suggesting that credit card companies are aggressively trying to get students hooked on credit by luring them with T-shirts and other freebies when they apply for cards. This guide is designed to give you the facts you need to be a wise consumer and the tools to use credit to your
Read more…Credit Cards: What You Need To Know
The information in your credit report is key to getting the loans you need, but it is only half the story.
Before deciding whether or not to lend money, many organisations take your report, plus additional information included on your application form, and generate a credit score. This score predicts the risk involved in granting you credit.
Calculating your score
Computer programs score your application by looking at how past customers with similar profiles to yours repaid their credit commitments. Every lender uses a slightly different formula that represents its own and industry experience and these may be adjusted according to the type
Read more…Your National Credit Score (United Kingdom)
Debt Collection FAQs: A Guide for ConsumersIf you’re behind in paying your bills, or a creditor’s records mistakenly make it appear that you are, a debt collector may be contacting you.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer protection agency, enforces the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), which prohibits debt collectors from using abusive, unfair, or deceptive practices to collect from you.
Under the FDCPA, a debt collector is someone who regularly collects debts owed to others. This includes collection agencies, lawyers who collect debts on a regular basis, and companies that buy delinquent debts and then try to collect
Read more…Debt Collection – A Guide for Consumers
As surprising as this may sound, the vast majority of consumers don’t know what their credit score is. That fact is almost as bad as not knowing what your blood pressure is, because by the same token, by the time you discover that it is not where it should be, it is frequently too late to avoid the detrimental or adverse effects of a poor credit score, or high blood pressure.
Sometimes, credit scores go by the name of FICO scores. Approximately ten percent of your FICO score pertains to a detailed analysis of the number and types of accounts
Read more…Improve Your Credit Rating (United States)
Credit ratings are determined differently in each country, but the factors are similar, and may include:
Payment history – a record of delinquent payments, generally being more than 30 days, will lower the credit rating.
Control of debt – Lenders want to see that borrowers are not living beyond their means. Experts estimate that non-mortgage credit payments each month should not exceed more than 15 percent of the borrower’s after-tax income.
Signs of responsibility and stability – Lenders perceive things such as longevity in the borrower’s home and job (at least two years) as signs of stability.
Re-Aging
Read more…How credit rating is determined
Credit history or credit report is, in many countries, a record of an individual’s or company’s past borrowing and repaying, including information about late payments and bankruptcy. The term “credit reputation” can either be used synonymous to credit history or to credit score.
In the U.S., when a customer fills out an application for credit from a bank, store or credit card company, their information is forwarded to a credit bureau. The credit bureau matches the name, address and other identifying information on the credit applicant with information retained by the bureau in its files.That’s why it’s very important for creditors,
Read more…Credit history or credit report (United States)
Can You Improve Your Credit Score? – Follow These Credit Tips to Increase Your Credit Rating
Having a strong credit score has never been more important than right now. The current economic situation has made the money available to borrow for things like mortgages or new credit cards very difficult if your credit score is less than perfect. Unfortunately many consumers are unaware of the fact that a weak credit rating on their credit report not only affects your ability to borrow money but it also effects many other aspects of your life.
A great example of what other areas your
Read more…Improving Your Credit Report | Increasing Your Credit Rating
When you’re sorting out how to pay back your debts, you’ll need to identify the priority debts. This will mean you can use your available money to settle the most important debts first.
Priority debtsThe most important debts aren’t necessarily the biggest ones. Priority debts are ones where serious action can be taken against you if you don’t pay what you owe.Some examples of priority debts, and the consequences of not dealing with them, are listed below.
MortgagesIf you don’t keep up with mortgage payments, the mortgage lender can take legal action to take possession of your house and sell it, for
Read more…Which debts to pay off first (United Kingdom)
For most people, one of the most important things to do to establish a credit record is to join the electoral register – but as you are not entitled to vote in the UK, this option is not open to you.However, James Jones of credit reference agency Experian says there are still things you can do. “If you send us some other forms of documentation proving your name and address – such as utility bills or a council tax statement – we can add a note to your record where the electoral register entry would normally be,” he says. “That
Read more…New to the United Kingdom – One step to get some credit history
To get a good credit card, you need a good credit history. Here’s how to build or rebuild yours.
It has never been quite that simple for borrowers with credit problems or without a credit history to get a good credit card deal. And with lending criteria getting tighter, it looks set to get even more difficult.Nowadays, the most competitive credit cards are usually reserved for people with excellent credit ratings. If your credit score doesn’t measure up, don’t be surprised if you get turned down if you apply for a top credit card.But that doesn’t mean you can’t get credit
Read more…How to biuld, or, rebuild your credit history (United Kingdom)
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