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I'm thinking the biggest factor is how new all of my cards are. I mean, I do think it's weird that they are offering me other cards so they must be open to me having more money. But maybe me showing balances on almost all of my cards is scaring them. It's obvious on my credit reports that I pay in full each month because the prior balance and actual payment amount are the same. They can also see in their records that I pif. I don't really know what all they look at and how much they look into it. I wish I had not gotten the same rep both times. It seems like the same 3 people answer that phone at that number.
It is highly unrealistic for you to expect to get multiple increases when you only have four months of history. That is a very, very short time and they most likely just want to see more history with the accounts you have. I know waiting is hard, but it is the best way to get the limits that you want.
@navigatethis12 wrote:It is highly unrealistic for you to expect to get multiple increases when you only have four months of history. That is a very, very short time and they most likely just want to see more history with the accounts you have. I know waiting is hard, but it is the best way to get the limits that you want.
I only have 4 months of history with the credit cards....my credit history goes back to 1992. I have a paid off mortgage and car loan and then nothing in between. I think they are ignoring those older accounts since they are different forms of credit. One of their reasons on the letter was "no current installment loans". After I paid off all my accounts and started paying cash for everything, I thought it was a good thing. I never realized how much it would affect my credit until this year. I'm now seeing that no credit is just as bad as bad credit.
@snowkitty wrote:I only have 4 months of history with the credit cards....my credit history goes back to 1992. I have a paid off mortgage and car loan and then nothing in between. I think they are ignoring those older accounts since they are different forms of credit. One of their reasons on the letter was "no current installment loans". After I paid off all my accounts and started paying cash for everything, I thought it was a good thing. I never realized how much it would affect my credit until this year. I'm now seeing that no credit is just as bad as bad credit.
Okay. I apologise for misunderstanding the situation. The no installment loans thing is something I occasionally see and I ignore it. I refuse to get a loan when I do not need one, and when talking to a human they do not even mention it. You are right that those are different forms of credit and most likely why they are hesitant. I obviously can not be sure why they are not increasing, but I would just say wait a month or two. I have spoken to an underwriter twice (weirdly it was the same woman) and got the increases a month between each other, so not enough time at current limit is not the problem. Have you tried ringing customer service first and then have them transfer you? That is what I do and maybe you would get someone different.
@snowkitty wrote:
@navigatethis12 wrote:It is highly unrealistic for you to expect to get multiple increases when you only have four months of history. That is a very, very short time and they most likely just want to see more history with the accounts you have. I know waiting is hard, but it is the best way to get the limits that you want.
I only have 4 months of history with the credit cards....my credit history goes back to 1992. I have a paid off mortgage and car loan and then nothing in between. I think they are ignoring those older accounts since they are different forms of credit. One of their reasons on the letter was "no current installment loans". After I paid off all my accounts and started paying cash for everything, I thought it was a good thing. I never realized how much it would affect my credit until this year. I'm now seeing that no credit is just as bad as bad credit.
First, they aren't ignoring your old credit because it is old, they are ignoring it because it is secured debt (home and car). Your experienced with unsecured debt is 4 months old. In those four months, you have added a ton of cards and except for October, have asked for CLI every single month since. Four months isn't enough time to "prove" that you pif. Your denials have nothing to do with carrying a balance, pif, etc. they have everything to do with your adding a bunch of cards to a very thin file in a short period of time.
If you really want your credit to grow, you need to stop applying for new cards, stop asking for CLI and just use the cards responsibly for a year. You are trying to achieve in months something that takes years to establish. Don't be led astray by the 22 year olds that go from zero to 60 in a week. They are in a different bucket than you and are evaluated by credit issuers using completely different criteria than you (since you have an older, but thin, file). Just chill. It will fix itself with time.
@snowkitty wrote:
@navigatethis12 wrote:It is highly unrealistic for you to expect to get multiple increases when you only have four months of history. That is a very, very short time and they most likely just want to see more history with the accounts you have. I know waiting is hard, but it is the best way to get the limits that you want.
I only have 4 months of history with the credit cards....my credit history goes back to 1992. I have a paid off mortgage and car loan and then nothing in between. I think they are ignoring those older accounts since they are different forms of credit. One of their reasons on the letter was "no current installment loans". After I paid off all my accounts and started paying cash for everything, I thought it was a good thing. I never realized how much it would affect my credit until this year. I'm now seeing that no credit is just as bad as bad credit.
OMG! I thought I was reading ' my story'. My credit goes back to 1985, I have a paid mortgage, car and student loans and after 2004 ZIP- Nada. So, I purchased a car in April (Chase) no problem but got the itch to apply for revolvers and was rejected - hard. This September, I turned to GE- cards and was happy to be approved (2 in Sept and 2 in Oct). I tried different methods. I used 2 cars and let a sm balance report. I also tried PIF on 1 card while keeping a sm bal on 1 card. I even tried paying double the minimum balance. At no time did I have balances report on all cards. I know I was shy 1 month of the ' fourth statement rule' but I tried unsuccessfully to get CLI on 2 of my oldest cards for Black Friday- also my util was never higher than 4%.
My letters said 'insufficient experience at your current credit limit' and 'too few accounts currently paid as agreed'. I read them as allow them to 'season and keep up the good work' . Although it is mystifying how others have reported CLI's before the 4th statement or obtaining huge increases in a short time- I am happy for them . I will leave well enough alone and wait for my increase....when it comes it comes.
@09Lexie wrote:
@snowkitty wrote:
@navigatethis12 wrote:It is highly unrealistic for you to expect to get multiple increases when you only have four months of history. That is a very, very short time and they most likely just want to see more history with the accounts you have. I know waiting is hard, but it is the best way to get the limits that you want.
I only have 4 months of history with the credit cards....my credit history goes back to 1992. I have a paid off mortgage and car loan and then nothing in between. I think they are ignoring those older accounts since they are different forms of credit. One of their reasons on the letter was "no current installment loans". After I paid off all my accounts and started paying cash for everything, I thought it was a good thing. I never realized how much it would affect my credit until this year. I'm now seeing that no credit is just as bad as bad credit.
OMG! I thought I was reading ' my story'. My credit goes back to 1985, I have a paid mortgage, car and student loans and after 2004 ZIP- Nada. So, I purchased a car in April (Chase) no problem but got the itch to apply for revolvers and was rejected - hard. This September, I turned to GE- cards and was happy to be approved (2 in Sept and 2 in Oct). I tried different methods. I used 2 cars and let a sm balance report. I also tried PIF on 1 card while keeping a sm bal on 1 card. I even tried paying double the minimum balance. At no time did I have balances report on all cards. I know I was shy 1 month of the ' fourth statement rule' but I tried unsuccessfully to get CLI on 2 of my oldest cards for Black Friday- also my util was never higher than 4%.
My letters said 'insufficient experience at your current credit limit' and 'too few accounts currently paid as agreed'. I read them as allow them to 'season and keep up the good work' . Although it is mystifying how others have reported CLI's before the 4th statement or obtaining huge increases in a short time- I am happy for them . I will leave well enough alone and wait for my increase....when it comes it comes.
Ha! Just logged into Walmart to pay my bill and noticed a $100 CLI! I know it's small but since I didn't ask for it I am happy. Just a side note no change for Penneys and received that card first.
Time is what will get you increases. Also, I think by asking for the small increases initially, you will have delayed getting your next increase for a little while. It's frustrating, but that is how GE can be. Yes, some people can call underwriting and get an increase on some cards, but other times they will not budge. This happened to my Sam's Discover. They dropped it when the financial crisis hit, and were often very resistant to any CLI, except on their unpredictable timetable.