Debt Reduction Notes
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What
is Good Credit Management
- Credit management
means always
paying your debt obligations on time
for the amount required.
How you handle your debt obligations are
reported by your lender to credit agencies.
Any time that you fail to make a payment
on time may be reported to the credit
agencies. Example:
If you fail to make payment on your
credit card or loan within 30 days of
the payment due date, your lender may
report this to the credit agencies as
a 30-day late payment.
Your credit report will then show "1x30",
which means that you have failed to
make payments "1 time" in
thirty days.
If you continue to delay payment past
60 days from the due date, your credit
report may show "1x60", which
means that you have failed to make payments
"1 time" in sixty days.
If you continue to delay payment past
90 days from the due date, your credit
report may show "1x90".
If you continue to delay payment, your
credit report may show that the account
past due has been sent to collection.
- Your credit information
is maintained for other parties
to review when you make an application
for a loan, apply for insurance, and in
some cases, seek employment.
Some lenders may not approve your application
for credit if your report has any "1X60"
or greater on your report. Other lenders
may not give your the best interest rate
if your report shows any "1x30".
Likewise, employers who see more than
3x30, or 2x60, etc., on your credit report
may consider you at risk since your credit
history shows that you fail to meet your
credit obligations.
That is why maintaining a strong credit
report is extremely important.
- In reviewing credit
applications,
lending institutions will
review the following information to determine
your creditworthiness:
- Your current outstanding debt
- Places and the number of times you
have applied for credit
- The kind of credit you have taken
out in the past
- Late payments
- Over extension of your credit lines
- Liens
- Garnishments
- Bankruptcy
- Your outstanding
credit report lists any payment delinquencies
that you may have had over the past seven
years.
You have the right under Federal Law to
know what is in your credit report.
While information regarding your credit
habits for the last seven years appears
on your credit report, no adverse credit
information, with the exception for bankruptcy,
may be kept on file for more than ten
years.
- You need a credit
history of at least one year to ensure
a good credit report.
The credit score estimates your ability
to repay a loan as evidenced by your credit
history. A lender will sometimes give
you a better loan rate based on a good
credit report.
There are three major credit bureaus that
maintains your credit information. A lending
institution may use all three bureaus
for credit reviews.
For information about credit bureaus and
credit monitoring services, click
here

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Maintaining
Good Credit
- Make it your personal goal to pay your
credit and other obligations on time and
for the required amount each month.
Debt obligations will include:
- credit card charges
- loan payments
- rent or mortgage payments
- utility bills
- service or product bills
- taxes
- support payments
- other
- Take advantage of automatic payments
and other online bill payment strategies
offered by lenders and credit card issuers.
This will ensure timely payments.
If you forget to make a payment, act promptly
on any notices of non- or late payments.
Call the bill servicer to notify them
that your payment will be sent immediately.
Do not ignore any creditor notices of
non-payment. Contact the creditor to fix
the problem.
- Adverse conditions such as late or non-payments
are two of the most common items that
are reported to the credit agencies.
You can avoid adverse conditions by making
on-time payments.
Your credit report will also list all
open credit cards and loans, listing the
amount borrowed and the amount owned on
the account.
Your objective is to build a pattern where
you payoff large credit card balances
in full each month.
This pattern conveys a sense of responsibility
for your debt obligations.
- You can build a strong payment pattern
by charging everyday living expenses on
your credit card, deducting the charge
from your money account, and then paying
off the monthly credit card charge in
full each month with your money deductions.
You can download FREE an outline plan
that describes how to account for everyday
purchases. The plan uses rebate credit
cards to maximize your rebate options.
Click
here to download plan
- Important Note:
you need to follow these rules before
you undertake this credit payment pattern:
- you must set aside funds for every
credit card purchase you make
- you must pay your credit card balance
in full each month
- you must have an existing credit
line or home equity line (with lower
interest rate) to finance large ticket
items — never finance purchases
with your credit cards
- As your credit rating improves, you
will soon receive pre-approved offers
from credit card companies and lenders
with attractive rates and programs.
You should limit your credit to 3-4 cards
maximum. Maintaining a large collection
of cards can hurt your credit rating.
- Since you maintain 3-4 credit cards
(VISA, MasterCard, Discover, American
Express, or other), it isn't necessary
to hold gasoline cards, retail store cards,
and other specialized credit cards. Simply
use your credit card.
Again, holding multiple cards can drag
down your credit score.
- Using your credit up to your maximum
credit line balance can impact your credit
rating.
Maximized credit lines (including home
equity lines, credit cards and unsecured
credit lines) indicate that you are a
consumer who borrows willingly. Many lenders
consider this a great risk and may not
approve you for additional credit.
A good rule to follow is to keep your
balances at or below 60 percent of the
available credit line.
- About 1-in-4 credit reports have errors.
Either a payment on a loan amount has
not been recorded correctly or another
billing company has posted an incorrect
non-payment information to your account.
Your credit report also maintains records
on your employment, salary, bank accounts,
etc., especially the information that
you supplied when making a previous credit
application.
You should review your report annually
for errors and make the necessary corrections
as instructed by the credit agency.
Link to: reviewing
your credit report
- Every time you apply for credit, seek
some kind on contractual service, or in
some cases employment, a credit inquiry
will be made on your report.
Multiple inquiries over a period of time
may impact your credit score.
Models show that multiple inquiries over
a period of time indicate an applicant
who is anticipating credit problems. So
limit credit inquiries when only necessary.
- What about having
multiple lenders compete for your loan?
Many Internet services and brokers (including
our lending network) allow you to
submit one form and have up to four lenders
review your credit information.
Credit agencies understand that these
services may require an inquiry by "multiple
lenders" at the same time.
These kind of inquiries, coming from multiple
lenders within 20-30 days of each other,
indicate that you are shopping for the
best deal. Credit agencies will count
these inquiries as being only one inquiry.
This allows you to shop and negotiate
best deal without being penalized on your
credit report.
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