Article - 5 factors affecting your credit score
October 2010
Credit scores range between 200 and 800, with scores above 620 considered desirable for
obtaining a mortgage. The following factors affect your score:
1. Your payment history. Did you pay your credit card obligations on time? If they were late,
then how late? Bankruptcy filing, liens, and collection activity also impact your history.
2. How much you owe. If you owe a great deal of money on numerous accounts, it can indicate that
you are overextended. However, it's a good thing if you have a good proportion of balances to total credit
limits.
3. The length of your credit history. In general, the longer you have had accounts opened, the
better. The average consumer's oldest obligation is 14 years old, indicating that he or she has been managing
credit for some time, according to Fair Isaac Corp., and only one in 20 consumers have credit histories shorter
than 2 years.
4. How much new credit you have. New credit, either installment payments or new credit cards,
are considered more risky, even if you pay them promptly.
5. The types of credit you use. Generally, it's desirable to have more than one type of credit -
installment loans, credit cards, and a mortgage, for example.
Source: Reprinted from REALTOR® magazine (REALTOR.org/realtormag) with permission of the
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
Dy Associates is an Oakland Real Estate company specializing in commercial, home and
investment property in the Oakland and East Bay Area. We provide real estate services including buyer agent,
seller agent, short sales, commercial and investment aquisitions, loan facilitation, hard money lending, proerty
management. Articles are provided as information only. We do not provide legal or general investment
advice.
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