FICO Rule Changes Will Boost Credit Scores
No more pins and needles. Your life will be a lot less worrisome if you have already been practicing good money management habits, like paying bills on time and spreading debt around without overextending your debt-to-credit ratio. Fair Isaac Corp., that baffling company responsible for the FICO score, is adding a little bit of leniency into the system it uses to determine a person’s credit score. Here are some of the most significant changes, according to Money magazine:
Isolated late payments are less damaging: Any time you make a habit of paying bills late, it’s going to be ugly. However, if you’ve done that only once or twice a while ago, but are in good standing otherwise and have a lengthy credit history (10+ years), you’ll probably be in the clear. “In fact, you could see a one-time boost in your score with the new formula,” Walecia Konrad writes in Money.
Multiple credit inquiries are less damaging: Within a 45-day window, you can undergo several credit inquiries with little or no effect on your credit report. “The change is a reflection of the fact that the average person has more credit accounts and loans today than in the past,” Konrad writes.
Multiple debts? No problem: Rather than determining how many accounts you have, what will be more significant to your credit score is how close those accounts are to being maxed out. Accounts that are nearly maxed out will drop your score by several points, but successfully managing (and not maxing out) a mixed bag of loans and lines of credit will boost your score. Therefore, Konrad recommends spreading debt over several credit cards to keep debt-to-credit ratio down.
At the risk of appearing overly suspicious, are these changes a subtle way to try to boost the economy and lenders’ profits? At any rate, no complaints here. It will be nice to see that late payment on the Kohl’s credit card from 2003 finally drop off the credit report!



