CREDIT PART 2: What NOT to do when you are trying to improve your credit score - Whitney Hansen | Money Coaching (2024)

Hey there credit-inquisitors! This series of posts is designed for you to learn all you can about credit. By now, I hope you have read the first post “What does your credit score mean and what can you do to improve it?” which teaches you why you should care about your credit score and outlines the top 5 factors that are used to calculate the number. So by now you should know the good behaviors and hopefully you are putting them into practice.

Now it’s time for Step 2: Learn the credit “no-no’s” – what NOT to do when you are trying to improve your credit score. Some of these no-no’s might take you by surprise, so pay close attention.

Don’t miss or make any late payments on your bills

This one is obvious. You can’t be missing payments on your bills. If you’re having trouble keeping track of when things are due, you need a new system. Perhaps you could set up automatic withdrawals for your payments? Can you set up email reminders? Whatever it takes to ensure you pay all of your bills on time – do that. This is a basic adult responsibility so buck up and pay your bills on time!

Don’t open any new credit cards

It might seem counterintuitive when I say to not open any new cards if you are trying to build credit. But if you’re trying to improve your score, opening new cards is not a smart move. You DO want to have ample available credit to you (meaning you want high limits but low or zero balances) for a good credit score, but in the short term, opening new credit accounts causes your score to decrease.

There’s a bit of a caveat with this one: if you don’t have any credit at all, you might have to start by opening a card to build credit. This is only a good move if you are playing the long game. Opening a new card will ding your credit to begin with, but as long as you continue to leave it open with a zero balance, over time your score will rise.

CREDIT PART 2: What NOT to do when you are trying to improve your credit score - Whitney Hansen | Money Coaching (1)

Don’t apply for a loan

There are two types of credit report inquiries: hard pulls and soft pulls. When you are checking your own credit (which you can do for free, once a year through annualcreditreport.com, the only site I trust) it is a soft pull. Similarly, if a company checks your credit as part of a background check, this is a soft pull. Soft pulls do NOT ding your credit. However, every time you apply for a loan the creditor pulls your credit report. This is a necessary pre-qualifier to get a loan, and these are “hard pulls” of your credit. All hard pulls result in a ding to your credit score. How much will this ding affect your score? Well, that’s a mystery. It might only bring your score down a few points, maybe 10, but is it worth it? This “ding” will stay on your report for about 2 years – so be smart.

Don’t make any major purchases on credit

This one goes hand in hand with the above (Don’t apply for a loan). In particular, if you’re trying to buy a house (or want to buy one soon), do NOT go out and buy a new car or rack up $5,000 worth of furniture on your credit card. Spend only what you have and buy only what’s necessary. This is a great time to build a budget and stick to it.

Don’t declare bankruptcy

If you’re really in a bind with your debt and you’re overwhelmed and not sure if you’ll ever be able to pay it off, you might be considering bankruptcy to eliminate the debt and get a fresh start. But is a fresh start really what it is? Even if you’re desperate, bankruptcy is usually not a good option. If you do file for bankruptcy, it will lower your credit score and stay on your report for 7-10 years. Banks and creditors don’t like to see this, so if you declare bankruptcy, you’ll have a really hard time getting a loan for about a decade.

Don’t close out old credit cards

A longer credit history improves your credit score, so even if you aren’t using your oldest credit cards, don’t close them. Keeping your older cards open (with zero balances) is a good move.

Don’t transfer balances from several cards to one card

If you have a credit card with a really low interest rate and you want to consolidate all of your balances and move them to one card, it’s usually not the best option for your credit score. If you transfer all your balances to a single card your credit utilization for that card increases, and this will hurt more than help your credit score. It’s usually more favorable to have a few small balances on various cards than max out a single card.

What you don’t do can be just as important as what you do, so pay attention to your actions, always keeping in mind your end goals.

CREDIT PART 2: What NOT to do when you are trying to improve your credit score - Whitney Hansen | Money Coaching (2024)

FAQs

What three things should you avoid doing so your credit score won t be affected? ›

As you learn more about the factors that affect your credit score, here are some of the most common credit mistakes and how to avoid them.
  • Ignoring Your Credit. ...
  • Not Paying Bills on Time. ...
  • Only Making Minimum Payments. ...
  • Applying for Multiple Credit Cards at Once. ...
  • Taking on Unnecessary Credit. ...
  • Closing Credit Card Accounts.
Jul 5, 2023

What is a good strategy if you want to improve your credit score on Quizlet? ›

You can increase your credit score by paying bills on time, using a low percentage of your available credit, and using a variety of credit types. Opening several new lines of credit at once can hurt your credit score.

What are the 2 main factors taken into account that affect your credit score? ›

The 5 Factors that Make Up Your Credit Score
  • Payment History. Weight: 35% Payment history defines how consistently you've made your payments on time. ...
  • Amounts You Owe. Weight: 30% ...
  • Length of Your Credit History. Weight: 15% ...
  • New Credit You Apply For. Weight: 10% ...
  • Types of Credit You Use. Weight: 10%
Aug 31, 2021

What kind of credit inquiry has no effect on your credit score in EverFi? ›

Soft Inquiry Hard Inquiry Occurs when someone runs a background check on your credit like when ur starting @ a new job and DOESN'T affect ur Credit Score. Occurs when someone checks ur Credit History to make a lending decision. - A hard Inquiry AFFECTS ur Credit Score and can remain on report for up to 2 YEARS.

What not to do when trying to build credit? ›

Here are five things to avoid when you're trying to build your credit score:
  1. Failing to Establish Credit. You can't build credit, Harrah points out, unless you establish it in the first place. ...
  2. Making Late Payments. ...
  3. Using Too Much Credit. ...
  4. Using Only Credit Cards. ...
  5. Canceling Old Credit Accounts.

What are at least 3 things not factored in your FICO score? ›

FICO® Scores consider a wide range of information on your credit report. However, they do not consider: Your race, color, religion, national origin, sex and marital status.

What are the 2 biggest factors that determine your FICO score? ›

FICO Scores are calculated using many different pieces of credit data in your credit report. This data is grouped into five categories: payment history (35%), amounts owed (30%), length of credit history (15%), new credit (10%) and credit mix (10%).

What are at least two things that can affect your credit score and how they improve or decrease your score? ›

Common things that improve or lower credit scores include factors related to your payment history, amount of debt that you've used, and your credit mix. Your credit score also factors in whether you've open new credit recently and how long you've had credit.

What habit lowers your credit score? ›

Making a Late Payment

Every late payment shows up on your credit score and having a history of late payments combined with closed accounts will negatively impact your credit for quite some time. All you have to do to break this habit is make your payments on time.

Can you have two hard credit inquiries in one day? ›

A single hard inquiry will go mostly unnoticed by the credit bureaus. Any “damage” done will mend itself in a couple months. However, if you make too many hard inquiries in a short enough period of time, your credit score will drop, possibly significantly.

What is considered to be an excellent credit score? ›

Although ranges vary depending on the credit scoring model, generally credit scores from 580 to 669 are considered fair; 670 to 739 are considered good; 740 to 799 are considered very good; and 800 and up are considered excellent.

What are 3 actions that can harm your credit? ›

Here are five ways that could happen:
  • Making a late payment. ...
  • Having a high debt to credit utilization ratio. ...
  • Applying for a lot of credit at once. ...
  • Closing a credit card account. ...
  • Stopping your credit-related activities for an extended period.

What 3 things can cause a low credit score? ›

Five Main Causes of Bad Credit
  • Late payments. A person's payment history accounts for 35% of their credit score. ...
  • Collection accounts. When creditors are unable to secure payments from a borrower, they can use third-parties to enforce the collection process. ...
  • Bankruptcy filing. ...
  • Charge-offs. ...
  • Defaulting on loans.

What are 3 things you can do to help improve your credit score? ›

Ways to improve your credit score
  • Paying your loans on time.
  • Not getting too close to your credit limit.
  • Having a long credit history.
  • Making sure your credit report doesn't have errors.
Nov 7, 2023

What are 3 ways your credit score can drop? ›

Credit scores can drop due to a variety of reasons, including late or missed payments, changes to your credit utilization rate, a change in your credit mix, closing older accounts (which may shorten your length of credit history overall), or applying for new credit accounts.

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