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Credit Scores

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Why Your Credit Score Matters: A Simple Guide

Your credit score is a three-digit snapshot (300–850) of how you handle borrowed money. It can change the cost of your life by tens—or hundreds—of thousands of dollars.

What Is a Credit Score, Really?

Think of it like a report card for borrowing: on-time payments and low balances = higher score and cheaper credit.

Range📊

300–850

Higher is better. Most lenders consider 740+ “excellent.”

Why it matters💸

It changes your costs

Loans, deposits, insurance, even some jobs—pricing and approvals often track your score.

Report vs. Score🧾

Report = details, Score = summary

Your report lists accounts & history. Your score is the algorithmic result.

Why You Should Care

Same car, same apartment, same house—radically different lifetime cost depending on your score.

Renting an Apartment

Landlords check credit. A lower score can mean rejection or a bigger deposit (sometimes 2–3×).

Buying a Car

Good credit (~700+): ~6% APR vs. Poor credit (<600): 15–20% APR.

On a $20,000, 5-year loan, that’s roughly $3,200 vs. $10,000+ interest—same car.

Buying a Home

On a $400,000 mortgage, a 2% rate gap over 30 years can add $150,000+ in interest. Your score sets your rate.

Other Costs You Might Not Expect

  • Cell plans & device financing
  • Insurance pricing
  • Utility deposits
  • Some employment checks (roles handling money)

What Actually Affects Your Score

Five levers you can control—starting today.

Payment History (35%)

On-time, every time. A single 30-day late can drop your score by ~100 points.

Utilization (30%)

Keep balances < 30% of your limit (under 10% is best). Example: $1,000 limit → aim < $100.

Length of History (15%)

Older is better. Don’t close your oldest accounts unless there’s a good reason.

New Credit (10%)

Too many new accounts in a short window looks risky. Space out applications.

Mix of Credit (10%)

A healthy mix (card + installment loan) can help—but never borrow just for “mix.”

How to Build & Protect Your Credit

Simple systems beat perfect intentions.

  1. Autopay the minimums on every account (then pay extra manually). Never miss a due date.
  2. Use a card for essentials (groceries/gas) and pay in full each month.
  3. Keep utilization low: ask for limit increases as your income rises, but don’t raise spending.
  4. Don’t close old cards unless the fees or risks outweigh the benefit.
  5. Check your credit reports for errors and dispute inaccuracies.

Quick Answers

Do soft pulls hurt my score?

No. Checking your own credit is a soft inquiry and doesn’t affect your score.

How fast can I improve?

Utilization improvements can help in 30–60 days. Late payments take longer to fade.

What if I have no credit?

Consider a secured card or being added as an authorized user on a well-managed account.

Next step

Lower Your Costs by Raising Your Score

Use our tools to cut interest, track balances, and build a stronger profile.