How Often Does Your Credit Score Change?
This is a question we often get during the mortgage process.
A credit check may have uncovered some incorrect information, and you get
it updated. So how fast will it change?
What is a
Credit Score
Per the reporting agencies (TransUnion, Equifax, and
Expperian), your score is a snapshot of your current credit report as well as
how many pulls you have had on your report. For example, from
Yahoo:
“Right
now it’s 11:40 my time,” said Rod Griffin, director of public relations for
Experian, when I interviewed him for this story. “Let’s say a lender requested
your credit report right now. If you apply for credit (again) in an hour your
credit report could be different,” he says, referring to the inquiry that would
have been generated when the first lender accessed my credit information.
“Credit
reports can change as often as every day if there is new information provided
to the credit bureaus,” says Barry Paperno, community director for Credit.com.
If you
want to be technical about it, you don’t really have a credit report on file
with the credit reporting agencies to begin with. Explains Griffin: “We have
information from each of the lenders, and we go out to our databases and
compile information from those databases when a credit report is requested.
Your credit report represents a snapshot of your credit history at any given
point in time.”
That
means that the information is available in the credit reporting agencies’
(CRAs) databases at the time a credit report is requested is the information
that will be reported. “You don’t have a credit report until you apply for
credit and it’s requested,” Griffin says.
But
it’s not like checking your online bank account and seeing the debit card
purchase you made a few minutes ago in your running balance. “It’s not real
time,” says Griffin.
So What Do
You Recommend?
Set up payment reminders so you never have a late payment
again. Do remember that a lot of credit card companies want the payment a
few days before the due date to have time to process it. It’s not fair
since they say it’s due on a certain date, but it’s best be a few days early.
Set up automatic payments using online banking where you
can.
Check your credit report annually. Now, this won’t give you a score unless you
pay for it. But you can at least look for mistakes which do happen.
Get your credit report 3-6 months before applying for a
major loan.
Be patient. It can take 30-60 days for information to
be updated on a credit report after you’ve made changes (like paying off a
student loan, or had disputed information resolved)
8 Surprising Things That Impact Your Credit - this is from Credit.com
blog:
·
Renting a car
·
Applying for credit (even when you aren’t
rejected)
·
Disputing an account
·
Having credit cards, but no loans
·
Just a single late payment
·
Closing an account
·
Divorce
·
Late library books
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