cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

AAoA

tag
FutureBillionaire
Established Contributor

AAoA

What is a good AAoA in your opinion? What is a bad one?
Gas: Discover It, Penfed Platinum Rewards x2, Chase freedom, Citi TYP
Plane tickets: CSP
Groceries: AMEX BCP, Penfed Platinum Rewards,Citi TYP
Clothes: Express, Amex BCP, Discover IT
Amazon: Citi Forward, Cash +
Restaurants: Citi Forward, Chase Freedom, Discover IT, CSP
Hotels and other travel: Discover Escape, CSP
Movies: BofA travel rewards visa signature(fandango), Discover IT, Citi Forward, Freedom
Bars, clubs, tomfoolery: CSP, Citi Forward, Discover IT, Freedom
Balance transfers: Kroger 123 rewards
Bill Pay: Chase Ink Plus, Citi Forward,
Everyday spending: Bofa Accelerated cash rewards amex, Discover Escape
Message 1 of 14
13 REPLIES 13
Gunnar419
Valued Contributor

Re: AAoA

I'm thinking that's very much a YMMV question.

 

I know that, to FICO, a AAoA between 6 and 12 years is considered golden. But there are plenty of young people just starting out who can't even dream of such age.

 

So if you're 40 or 50 and you don't have an AAoA that's up there, that might be "bad." But if you're 22 and you have an AAoA of 4 years. or even 2 years, that might be great.

 

What FICO says in its mysterious algorithm is one thing. But if I were a human doing a review of someone's credit, I'd look less for absolute AAoA than, "Is this person's credit well planned and stable?" or "Is this person opening new accounts (and thereby shortening AAoA) just for the hell of it?"

 

Message 2 of 14
jamesdwi
Valued Contributor

Re: AAoA

I have a great AAoA for a 12 year old Smiley LOL

Cards: Chase Southwest 20k & CSR 17k & CSP 10k & FNBO 30k Oregon Duck 5k, & AMEX BCP 32.5k & Amex Magnet 15k&amg; Hilton Surpass 7.5k & Delta Gold 12k & Zync NPSL, Fidelity AMEX 17k Commerce5.9k & Cash Forward 7.5k & Sams Club MC 20k, Paypal Extras MC 10k, Paypal Credit 7.25k CapOne Venture 15k, QS 2.5k, QS 750, Amazon 10k, Walmart 10k, Citi Simplicity 18k, Discover IT 23k and a nice stack of store cards.
Landmarkcu Personal Loan 10k
Message 3 of 14
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: AAoA


@Gunnar419 wrote:

I'm thinking that's very much a YMMV question.

 

I know that, to FICO, a AAoA between 6 and 12 years is considered golden. But there are plenty of young people just starting out who can't even dream of such age.

 

So if you're 40 or 50 and you don't have an AAoA that's up there, that might be "bad." But if you're 22 and you have an AAoA of 4 years. or even 2 years, that might be great.

 

What FICO says in its mysterious algorithm is one thing. But if I were a human doing a review of someone's credit, I'd look less for absolute AAoA than, "Is this person's credit well planned and stable?" or "Is this person opening new accounts (and thereby shortening AAoA) just for the hell of it?"

 


Damn! You found me out!

Message 4 of 14
webhopper
Moderator Emeritus

Re: AAoA

I'm still young (31 yrs old)  so my personal goal is to keep my AAoA above 6.  Right now its at 5.5, so I won't be applying for any new credit until that AAoA increases.

 

I think your AAoA stops being a negative factor once you get up to 6 yrs.   Less than 1 year is really bad...   between 3-4 years is not terrible.   6 and up is awesomeland.

FICO 8:
Goal: Gardening!
Message 5 of 14
FutureBillionaire
Established Contributor

Re: AAoA

I'm at a bit over 4 years.  I think I have been for a while.  I could get another Amex if I cared about it.  I don't, though.

 

I have about 5-7 inquires per bureau.  My plan is to stay around that number.  I won't apply for new cards unless I am getting fantastic signup bonuses/rewards.

Gas: Discover It, Penfed Platinum Rewards x2, Chase freedom, Citi TYP
Plane tickets: CSP
Groceries: AMEX BCP, Penfed Platinum Rewards,Citi TYP
Clothes: Express, Amex BCP, Discover IT
Amazon: Citi Forward, Cash +
Restaurants: Citi Forward, Chase Freedom, Discover IT, CSP
Hotels and other travel: Discover Escape, CSP
Movies: BofA travel rewards visa signature(fandango), Discover IT, Citi Forward, Freedom
Bars, clubs, tomfoolery: CSP, Citi Forward, Discover IT, Freedom
Balance transfers: Kroger 123 rewards
Bill Pay: Chase Ink Plus, Citi Forward,
Everyday spending: Bofa Accelerated cash rewards amex, Discover Escape
Message 6 of 14
thom02099
Valued Contributor

Re: AAoA

In addition to  AAofA, your oldest account also is a contributor.  Hence the importance of AMEX backdating, particularly for those of us with "old" accounts (some older than some of the members here, LOL!).  Having older AMEX accounts, and getting new ones with that backdating certainly contributes to increasing that AAofA.  Wish more CCC would offer backdating... Smiley Sad

Message 7 of 14
Revelate
Moderator Emeritus

Re: AAoA

Think the model suffers extremely diminishing returns around the 4-5 year mark; I'd say anything over 5 is good.




        
Message 8 of 14
L0RDAVENTAD0R
Frequent Contributor

Re: AAoA

Mine is almost at 3 years (2 years & 11 months to be technical) & I'm 22. I can't even imagine having an AAoA of 12 years ! I need to let time do its thing.
Message 9 of 14
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: AAoA


@thom02099 wrote:

In addition to  AAofA, your oldest account also is a contributor.  Hence the importance of AMEX backdating, particularly for those of us with "old" accounts (some older than some of the members here, LOL!).  Having older AMEX accounts, and getting new ones with that backdating certainly contributes to increasing that AAofA.  Wish more CCC would offer backdating... Smiley Sad


And I still don't get why Fico allow it, unless other issuers have a way to discount it when getting score or AAoA.   My BCP now has a member since 1987 date.

I believe I got a gold Amex around 1987, and dropped it by 1989 (not worth the fee).   I then picked up a Blue Sky in 2007, and converted to BCP in 2012.

 

In what way is this a consistent 26 year relationship, the great majority of that time I wasn't an Amex customer at all?   Maybe I should contact Barclays, I had a chequing account (in the UK)with them from 1977 to about 1987, so surely they can backdate my Barclays Reward card back to then?  (And when I think about it, I really did have the Barclaycard UK credit card in 1978, so a good case!)

 

 

Message 10 of 14
Advertiser Disclosure: The offers that appear on this site are from third party advertisers from whom FICO receives compensation.