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I have been getting low credit limits on new cards and having a hard time with CLI's, and I think that may partially be because of a low income. ($30k) I am a student and I work a little more than part time as a well paid server, but all of my school costs are covered through financial aid (grants and scholarships, minimal loans). So my question is, it the amount of scholarship and grant eligible to be counted as income on applications for credit?
It totals about $27k/year, and pays for tuition, housing, and a meal plan.
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@Anonymous wrote:I have been getting low credit limits on new cards and having a hard time with CLI's, and I think that may partially be because of a low income. ($30k) I am a student and I work a little more than part time as a well paid server, but all of my school costs are covered through financial aid (grants and scholarships, minimal loans). So my question is, it the amount of scholarship and grant eligible to be counted as income on applications for credit?
It totals about $27k/year, and pays for tuition, housing, and a meal plan.
If it helps, I put down 30K as my income and my average credit card limit is 10K and I have 15 cards. I doubt it is the income that is causing your problem...Are you at or near your credit limit on any card? In my experience it is often those that are at too high utilization, or balances reporting on too many cards that have low credit limits.
To answer OP's question - yes, scholarships and grants can be included. According to the amenment to the CARD act, borrowers over 21 can list any income which they have "reasonable expecation of access" and those 18-21 can report only independent income which still includes both scholarships and grants.
With that being said, I agree with what others have mentioned your low SL and CLI issues are more than likely not the result of low income stated on your application but the result over your overall profile.
@sarge12 wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:I have been getting low credit limits on new cards and having a hard time with CLI's, and I think that may partially be because of a low income. ($30k) I am a student and I work a little more than part time as a well paid server, but all of my school costs are covered through financial aid (grants and scholarships, minimal loans). So my question is, it the amount of scholarship and grant eligible to be counted as income on applications for credit?
It totals about $27k/year, and pays for tuition, housing, and a meal plan.
If it helps, I put down 30K as my income and my average credit card limit is 10K and I have 15 cards. I doubt it is the income that is causing your problem...Are you at or near your credit limit on any card? In my experience it is often those that are at too high utilization, or balances reporting on too many cards that have low credit limits.
You are doing awesome to have a 10k average and 15 cards. My stated income is 100k and my average currently is only 7k accross 32 cards, and my AAoA is 4 years 7 months and my oldest account is 18 years. Give it some time, your limits will grow as you get new cards and your income grows. With only a 30k income, your lenders are probably concerned about how you will pay them back in a timely manner if you even use 30% of your total limits (guesstimated at 150k) which would be about 50k is more than 1.5x of your yearly income not including interest.
To answer everyone's questions,
My SL on marriott is $5k, the lowest that card goes (not yet reporting).
USAA started at $500, now at $1500 with 50% reporting.
CapOne started at $500, now at $2000, 0% reporting.
I was just approved for AmEx BCE with SL $1k, which I would assume is the lowest SL.
USAA and CapOne were both opened in 2/2016, showing 12 months of on time payments.
I don't want or need a ton more of avaliable credit, I was mostly just disappointed that my CLI requests on USAA (denied for util, makes sense) and CapOne were denied, and that BCE was so low. Ideally, my total credit limit across all lines would be 50% of my income, either $15k or $30k depending on whether scholarships and grants are being counted.
@Anonymous wrote:To answer OP's question - yes, scholarships and grants can be included. According to the amenment to the CARD act, borrowers over 21 can list any income which they have "reasonable expecation of access" and those 18-21 can report only independent income which still includes both scholarships and grants.
With that being said, I agree with what others have mentioned your low SL and CLI issues are more than likely not the result of low income stated on your application but the result over your overall profile.
I wouldn't think that this is true. I don't think the OP has access to that money. When I received scholarships and grants, they went to the school, not me. That money is allotted to school expenses. Creditors want to know what you have access to in order to pay the bill. OP does not have that money to pay on a credit card bill.
I do think that income can limit how much a person gets as far as credit. I don't know why someone who makes $30000 working part time needs a lot of credit. As income increases, I would think that credit will.
Bring all card balances to $0 except leave 1-9% utilization on one. Let your reports update with that intact, then continue your app journey.
A good way to big lines is to get cards that grow well and quickly like Amex and Discover. Grow the limits, then use those limits as leverage for apps at new institutions.