MONEY DFW - Lending Resources
Credit Scoring/Repair

What’s in your FICO® score

FICO Scores are calculated from a lot of different credit data in your credit report. This data can be grouped into five categories as outlined below. The percentages in the chart reflect how important each of the categories is in determining your FICO score.

Payment history: 35%, Amounts owed: 30%, Length of credit history: 15%, New credit: 10%, Types of credit used: 10%

These percentages are based on the importance of the five categories for the general population. For particular groups - for example, people who have not been using credit long - the importance of these categories may be somewhat different.

Payment History

  • Account payment information on specific types of accounts (credit cards, retail accounts, installment loans, finance company accounts, mortgage, etc.)
  • Presence of adverse public records (bankruptcy, judgements, suits, liens, wage attachments, etc.), collection items, and/or delinquency (past due items)
  • Severity of delinquency (how long past due)
  • Amount past due on delinquent accounts or collection items
  • Time since (recency of) past due items (delinquency), adverse public records (if any), or collection items (if any)
  • Number of past due items on file
  • Number of accounts paid as agreed

Amounts Owed

  • Amount owing on accounts
  • Amount owing on specific types of accounts
  • Lack of a specific type of balance, in some cases
  • Number of accounts with balances
  • Proportion of credit lines used (proportion of balances to total credit limits on certain types of revolving accounts)
  • Proportion of installment loan amounts still owing (proportion of balance to original loan amount on certain types of installment loans)

Length of Credit History

  • Time since accounts opened
  • Time since accounts opened, by specific type of account
  • Time since account activity

New Credit

  • Number of recently opened accounts, and proportion of accounts that are recently opened, by type of account
  • Number of recent credit inquiries
  • Time since recent account opening(s), by type of account
  • Time since credit inquiry(s)
  • Re-establishment of positive credit history following past payment problems

Types of Credit Used

  • Number of (presence, prevalence, and recent information on) various types of accounts (credit cards, retail accounts, installment loans, mortgage, consumer finance accounts, etc.)

Sometimes Credit Repair is Required to Clean up your Credit Score after a Divorce

May 21st, 2009

The statistics on the number of marriages that end in divorce are varied and open to interpretation, but what is certain is no one who enters a marriage with the person they believe to be their perfect match plans to experience the agony of dissolving the union.

As exhilarating as it is when you think you have found the person you will spend the rest of your life with, the realization that it is not meant to be is just the opposite. And if it wasn’t enough that the lifestyle two people have worked so hard to create is torn apart, a divorce can also wreck havoc on a person’s credit score. After the emotional and monetary sting of a divorce has started to subside, many people find they have also lost their good credit rating along the way.

The credit reporting system leaves much to be desired when it comes to accounting for a divorce and this is what makes a divorce one of the five credit killers according to the book Credit Revolution: Path of the Smart Consumer.”

continue reading “Sometimes Credit Repair is Required to Clean up your Credit Score after a Divorce” »

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