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@RobSteal wrote:
Will they backdate a Bank of America Accelerated Rewards American Express card?
This particular BofA card is not actually an American Express card, but it uses AMEX's network. Customer service is through BofA.
Do you think it would work on this type of AMEX card?
Nope - Only cards issued by American Express (not Bank of America).
Oh yea, went from 4 Yrs AAoA to 7
To the other poster, no, only cards issued by Centurion bank can be backdated.
@kromix wrote:Oh yea, went from 4 Yrs AAoA to 7
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To the other poster, no, only cards issued by Centurion bank can be backdated.
presto chango!
@kromix wrote:Oh yea, went from 4 Yrs AAoA to 7
To the other poster, no, only cards issued by Centurion bank can be backdated.
Woo, hoo!!! Nice going!
Help me understand the AAoAs. If I open a Charge card with AMEX and it get backdated to 1997 too, will that continue to increase my AAoAs?
@DI wrote:Help me understand the AAoAs. If I open a Charge card with AMEX and it get backdated to 1997 too, will that continue to increase my AAoAs?
Yep that is the benefit, exactly how much of an increase hinges on current age and number of accts...
Is this correct? My oldest card is 14 years. Do I multiply 14 X 12 = 168/ 44 accounts to get an AAoAs of 3.8 years?
@DI wrote:Is this correct? My oldest card is 14 years. Do I multiply 14 X 12 = 168/ 44 accounts to get an AAoAs of 3.8 years?
Not unless every account is 14 years old.
How to calculate AAoA:
You take each account (revolving, installment, mortgage, everything) that shows on a report, whether open or closed, and figure its age in months, up to now (even for closed account.) So if you had an account opened in January 2007 and closed in January 2009, its age would be 53 months (1/2007 - 6/2011.) In other words, ignore the closed date and use today's date. Obviously it's the same for open accounts : opening date until now.
Add up all these ages in months.
Divide the total by the number of accounts --that's your AAoA in months.
Divide that number by 12 to get your AAoA in years. Flash back to fourth grade and express the extra months as a remainder, rather than a percentage. So if the answer is 101 months, instead of expressing it as 8.41666667, express it as 8 years 5 months.
Remember that FICO rounds it down to even number of years, so if this was your AAoA, it would be considered 8 years AAoA.
hth
Thanks, Hauling!
I came up with 1,370 months for my EX report. My calculations are 1,370 months/44 accounts= 31.136/12= 2.59 AAoAs.
That's too low! I included duplicate accounts too. I'll include my new AMEX account when I see it.
I have less accounts on my EQ and TU reports.
The AAoAs for my EQ report is 3.37. When AMEX is added the AAoAs becomes 3.75. If I add a 3rd AMEX account with a 1997 opening date, the AA0As becomes 4.10.