CREDIT TIPS

Factors that Impact Your Credit Score

Understanding what factors affect credit scores helps you plan the most effective way to build your credit or protect it.

Updated on

Aug 31, 2024

Understanding what factors affect credit scores helps you plan the most effective way to build your credit or protect it. Your credit scores are determined by several factors, such as whether you pay bills on time and the length of time you’ve used credit. Understanding what factors affect credit scores helps you plan the most effective way to build your credit or protect it.

Credit scoring companies calculate your scores from data in your credit reports. While they won’t reveal their exact formulas, they share the basic ingredients they use to calculate scores.

Why do you care?

Because your credit often holds the key to other parts of your life: whether you can get a credit card or car loan and at what interest rate; whether you can buy a house or rent the apartment you want; even how much you pay on car insurance and utility deposits.

The Factors that Affect Credit Scores Most

The two major scoring companies in the U.S., FICO and VantageScore, differ a bit in their approaches, but they agree on the two most important factors. Payment history and credit utilization—the portion of your credit limits that you actually use—make up more than half of your credit scores. Focus your attention mostly on those two while keeping an eye on the other factors.

Payment History

Your credit reports reveal your payment history, or whether you’ve consistently paid bills and other obligations on time. FICO says payment history accounts for 35% of your score. VantageScore says payment history counts for 40% of its 3.0 scoring model.

What to do: Pay all bills on time. Paying bills late by 30 days or more can dent your scores—and the later you pay, the greater the damage. Set up autopay or calendar reminders so you don’t miss due dates. You might also want to ask creditors to move your due dates so they better align with when you get paid.

Credit Utilization

The amount of your credit limit you use, expressed as a percentage, is called credit utilization. FICO says the amount of available credit you use counts for 30% of your score, while VantageScore 3.0 puts credit utilization at 20%.

What to do: Experts recommend using no more than 30% of your available credit. People with the highest scores tend to use much less than that. To keep your credit utilization low, try things like setting balance alerts or making extra monthly payments.

The good news is that score damage from having high credit utilization can be reversed. The damage disappears once you pay a high balance down and the creditor reports it to the credit bureaus.

Other Credit Score Factors You Should Know About

Once you’ve mastered paying on time and keeping credit utilization low, focus on other credit factors. These also affect your scores, though not nearly as much:

⦁ The Length of Time You’ve Had Credit: Longer is better, so keep old accounts open unless there is a compelling reason to close them, such as an annual fee on a card you no longer use. You might be able to help yourself a little in this category by becoming an authorized user on an old account with an excellent payment record.

⦁ The Kinds of Credit You Have or Credit Mix: It’s best to have a mix of installment accounts—those with a set number of equal payments, such as car payments or mortgages—and credit card accounts.

⦁ The Length of Time Since You’ve Applied for New Credit: Each application that causes a hard inquiry on your credit may take a few points off your score.

⦁ Total Balances and Debt: It’s best if you’re making progress in paying off your debt.

Factors That Don’t Affect Your Credit Score

⦁ Checking Your Own Score: If you get your own score through your bank or a free credit score service, it does not affect your score. That’s because checking your own score is considered a soft pull on your credit. You can check it as many times as you want with no impact on your score.

⦁ Rent and Utility Payments: Most of your rent and utility payments are not reported to the credit bureaus, so they do not count toward your score. The exception is if you use a rent-reporting service or if you are late on utility payments. The utility company may charge it off or sell it to a collector who can report it to the credit bureaus and hurt your score. Some products, such as Experian Boost, allow you to add utility and eligible rent payment information to your Experian credit report, which can influence your credit.

⦁ Income and Bank Balances: Credit reports include some employer information, but they are used only to match account data to the right person. Getting a raise won’t bump up your score, and it is possible to build credit on a small income. And since reports list only credit accounts—not savings, checking, or investment accounts—your balances in those also won’t help your score.

⦁ Your Age: Credit scoring companies don’t consider your age, but your age can still unofficially influence your scores.

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