Its still a good idea to check, incase someone is stealing your info to open bogus cards etc.I pay my bills and I am financially responsible. I pay no attention to my score.
This is my only real issue with the system. You can do everything right and still get screwed over. Like when Equifax was hacked and lost ll the data for millions, no one did anything about it. Just shrug.Its still a good idea to check, incase someone is stealing your info to open bogus cards etc.
This is my only real issue with the system. You can do everything right and still get screwed over. Like when Equifax was hacked and lost ll the data for millions, no one did anything about it. Just shrug.
My credit is lockedIts still a good idea to check, incase someone is stealing your info to open bogus cards etc.
There's a variance because each FICO score is designed to gauge a person's credit worthiness in varying scenarios.1) If there is a formula, why is there a variance?
2) Are you saying that you checked six scores from six different sources?
I take anything more than 200, I do the same with opening and closing savings accounts, checking accounts, credit cards and then multiply it by two (double it) for my wife and I opening separate accounts.That was my example...opened this card a year ago for a great bonus offer, hit the spending minimum to get said bonus, and then put a calendar reminder to close it before the annual fee hit. I'm all for playing the game too, although I'm only interested in the game if it pays $600+ on the offer.
Variance because not all credit is reported to all three agencies. The three agencies might have different data available to them.1) If there is a formula, why is there a variance?
2) Are you saying that you checked six scores from six different sources?
I keep them all frozen. I can unfreeze them in under 60 seconds.It happens, and has to me. Someone opened two credit cards in my name, took me 2 years to get it cleaned up.
Credit Karma provides a VantageScore 3.0 score. FICO is another credit score. The latest version is VantageScore 5.0. VantageScore 3.0 scores range from 300 to 850. FICO has versions 8 and 9. Each scoring system puts a different weighting on various credit indicators like utilization rate, history of payments, judgements, etc.My score, from 5 different sources, including a Volvo truck dealer, allweld, a semi tanker trailer builder, and 3 online credit score places i check regularly, are all so close together, they may as well be the same. Lowest was 863, highest 867, so it really doesn't matter which you want to go with. If anyone cares, Credit karma scored me lowest, and volvo dealership the highest.
Credit Karma provides a VantageScore 3.0 score. FICO is another credit score. The latest version is VantageScore 5.0. VantageScore 3.0 scores range from 300 to 850. FICO has versions 8 and 9. Each scoring system puts a different weighting on various credit indicators like utilization rate, history of payments, judgements, etc.
Could be. No idea how credit scores work in other countries.I believe Canada is different, and scores are 300 to 900.
Variance because not all credit is reported to all three agencies. The three agencies might have different data available to them.
Some of the public might also be confused as there are multiple different credit scores produced by the three credit agencies, not all of them are official FICO scores. They are credit agency scoring algorithms.
I don’t think these questions were to me, but also for number two as I posted in the paragraph above credit agencies produce multiple different scores for each consumer.
The score for example that a mortgage lender will look for is completely different than a score that an automobile dealer will look at or some local credit cards at someplace.
Meaning they produce different products that lenders subscribe for different lending criteria and related scoring for those products.
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FICO score reflects a snapshot of your current credit usage, types, and historical payment history. The change is score is likely influenced more than just closing an inactive account.Within the past few months I've noticed my FICO gain 20+ points despite no major changes other than me closing a card that has had a zero balance for quite some time. In theory, that should have caused a score decrease due to a loss of available credit, yes? Curious if they went to a different scoring metric now that caused increases across the board? Anyone else see unexplained movement? FICO now tracks the oil market maybe?![]()
This!I pay my bills and I am financially responsible. I pay no attention to my score.