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Clean and dirty credit reports are based on the distinction between major and minor derogs.
30-day lates are minor derogs.
60+ lates become major. And a CO or a CA is the same as a major derog, and usually much harder to deal with, for they then bring the FDCPA into the resolution process,
@RobertEG wrote:Clean and dirty credit reports are based on the distinction between major and minor derogs.
30-day lates are minor derogs.
60+ lates become major. And a CO or a CA is the same as a major derog, and usually much harder to deal with, for they then bring the FDCPA into the resolution process,
30 day lates are not minor for everyone. People with high scores can see a substantial decrease. Statement from credit.com
Please keep in mind that while you are earning the maximum amount of credit score points for this category that you also have the most to lose. If any serious negative information shows up on your credit report then you can expect your score to go down drastically.
But beware, your high credit score could drop dramatically by as much as 100 points if you make a late payment or increase your credit card balances. Keep on managing your credit responsibly!
I got this a year or so ago, from another credit board. This graphically illustrates how utilization works for two individual's credit scenarios. Don't remember the original poster, but it's a good one:
http://i494.photobucket.com/albums/rr310/stayingputinca/FICOUtil.jpg
(Just putting in the graphic Tangmeister provided above, from url http://i494.photobucket.com/albums/rr310/stayingputinca/FICOUtil.jpg )
DI wrote:
@RobertEG wrote:Clean and dirty credit reports are based on the distinction between major and minor derogs.
30-day lates are minor derogs.
60+ lates become major. And a CO or a CA is the same as a major derog, and usually much harder to deal with, for they then bring the FDCPA into the resolution process...
30 day lates are not minor for everyone. People with high scores can see a substantial decrease. Statement from credit.com...
Uborrow-Upay wrote:
(Just putting in the graphic Tangmeister provided above, from url http://i494.photobucket.com/albums/rr310/stayingputinca/FICOUtil.jpg )
@haulingthescoreup wrote:
@Uborrow-Upay wrote:(Just putting in the graphic Tangmeister provided above, from url http://i494.photobucket.com/albums/rr310/stayingputinca/FICOUtil.jpg )
Oh, cool, note how on the highest two score lines, there's no penalty for 0% util, but there is for the lower ones! Thanks, Ub-Up and Tangmeister!
marty56, where are you???
So does that mean I can let $0 balance report, and still maintain an increase in scores?
@DI wrote:So does that mean I can let $0 balance report, and still maintain an increase in scores?
It means that if you (as opposed to anyone else reading this) let 0% UTIL report you might actually see a score increase. You'll have to try it and find out. It's easy enought to reverse the next month if it doesn't work.
It also means that very consistently there is no reported change in FICO corresponding to UTIL changes between about 8% and 1%.
I wonder is this is chart based on TU98 or an even earler model? The later models used by EQ, EX and even TU may react differently to UTIL changes. Too bad we don't have a chart based on them!