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So you have a credit card with a $2000 limit.
You charge $200 bucks on it.
You pay it off.
It reports as zero when it hits because there's no balance.
How exactly do you build credit if it never shows you have a balance due? What am I missing and sorry if this is a dumb question (it probably is)
@Johnny_Favorite wrote:So you have a credit card with a $2000 limit.
You charge $200 bucks on it.
You pay it off.
It reports as zero when it hits because there's no balance.
How exactly do you build credit if it never shows you have a balance due? What am I missing and sorry if this is a dumb question (it probably is)
Hi! It's not a dumb question at all. From what I've learned on here, it is recommended that you let all credit accounts report zero balances except one, and keep that one at atbout 9%. This keeps utilization down and helps your FICO score. People can still see you are using your accounts becuase it reports the "Highest Balance" so they know you are using it, but keeping utl down is always recommended, especially when you may be apping for new accounts, mortgages or cars. Just my two cents..hope it helps!
I think there may be some confusion here.
Don't carry a balance means simply pay your account in full every month no matter how much you charge.
That is completely different than don't let a balance report. A balance can report even if you pay it in full. The last three months a balance has reported on my cards but I pay all my new charges meaning no interest is charged.
Okay thank you all. I think I'm understanding a little better now.
Credit newbie here.
If you had fund to paid then using it as much as you want but then paid most of them off before statement cut off .....leave 1 or 2 to report to balance........that s how I do.....
@webhopper wrote:
I don't agree with never letting a card report a balance. The fact is that your highest balance is reported. I have allowed a 4k balance to report on chase. A 4890 balance has reported on discover and a 8625 balance has reported on nfcu.
I also paid in full immediately after statement cut.
I personally think that manual reviewers and computers give me bonus points for actually using my cards.
For the most part I don't carry balances but if one months spend is rather high on a card I will let it report just to increase my "high balance"
Highest Balance is the largest balance that's been on the card at any time. If you charged $5k, pay it the next day, and then the statement cuts showing a $0 balance, that $5k high balance will still be reported as your Highest Balance. You don't need to let the statement cut for that to show. And no, you get no bonus points for that.
@Anonymous wrote:
@webhopper wrote:
I don't agree with never letting a card report a balance. The fact is that your highest balance is reported. I have allowed a 4k balance to report on chase. A 4890 balance has reported on discover and a 8625 balance has reported on nfcu.
I also paid in full immediately after statement cut.
I personally think that manual reviewers and computers give me bonus points for actually using my cards.
For the most part I don't carry balances but if one months spend is rather high on a card I will let it report just to increase my "high balance"Highest Balance is the largest balance that's been on the card at any time. If you charged $5k, pay it the next day, and then the statement cuts showing a $0 balance, that $5k high balance will still be reported as your Highest Balance. You don't need to let the statement cut for that to show. And no, you get no bonus points for that.
This, and also remember that credit reports don't have a memory, so nobody, not even fico, will know what your previous months balance was. However, you WILL lose points for having a maxed out card posted to your report (on statement cut date) even if you pay it off the day after, and will have to wait a month for it to recover.
Also the banks make their money on fees and I'm sure would rather have PIF your balances each month since to them it means less risk and less chance that you're going to default, and they're gonig to not only have to write off your debt, but spend money trying to collect. I'm sure they'll be more willing to extend you higher CLs and on the spot signature loans with lower interest if you have a hsitory with them of responsibly managing your money.