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5 FAST FIXES FOR YOUR CREDIT SCORE

Mortgage borrowers today understand the need for a high credit score. You won't have access to the best mortgage rates unless your credit score is 740 or higher.

 

If you're in the market for home loan and simply need to give your score a little boost before submitting your application, there are several things mortgage borrowers can do to push their scores up.

 

Here are five methods to raise your credit score quickly.

# 1:

Pay down credit card balances

People with the highest FICO scores carry balances on their credit cards that are less than 20% of their total available credit, Your balances account for 30% of your credit score.

 

While is it impossible to say exactly how much any one action will improve your score. Paying down debt is an easier and faster way to improve your score than fighting derogatory credit history, and it's more in your control.

 

You should pay down your debt to less than 30% of your credit limit. Transferring a balance from one credit card to another is not likely to improve your score much because total utilization of credit is more important than each individual debt, he says.

# 2:

Fix credit report errors

While every individual is different, credit scores rise by as much as 100 points after a credit report error has been removed. For example, a common item is a medical collection that you don't know about because you thought the insurance company had taken care of the bill. Sometimes you can have it removed if you can prove it's invalid, and sometimes it can help to pay it and then have it removed."

# 3:

Eliminate disputed

accounts

Disputed items on your credit report should be removed, particularly if you are applying for a conventional loan.

 

 

Disputed items have to be removed, so the borrower must send a letter to the creditor and the credit bureau that says they are no longer disputing the item. 

 

 

Disputed accounts appear as a derogatory item. We recommend contacting the creditor directly and asking to have it resolved and removed immediately from your credit report.

# 4:

Use an old credit card or apply for

a new one

While you may assume your credit score is high because you don't use credit cards, your score will actually improve if you can prove you use credit wisely. Unused old accounts won't have a positive impact on your score unless you use them occasionally.

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If you have four or five accounts with no activity and then use one and pay off the balance immediately, your score will go up.

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While most people should not apply for additional credit when applying for a mortgage, sometimes a customer who lacks a recent credit history can improve his or her score by being approved for a new credit card and then using it once.

# 5:

Don't close any accounts

Opening new, unnecessary credit cards and closing unused credit card accounts are equally likely to negatively impact your score.

 

Closing accounts is not advised, as it looks better to have more credit extended to you than what you are using.

 

Consumers can use these strategies to improve their credit scores in a short time

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