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@Anonymous wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
@FinStar wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:Many factors. Payment history, income, AAoA.
+1 Exactly. Income is a definite criteria, plus depending on the lender, if there is a presence of other higher TLs on file (i.e. capacity).
Indeed. They aren't going to give you a 50k card when your income is 30k... in most cases anyways.
They will if you "accidentally" add a 0.
Don't think it'd fly in a court of law if it goes that far.
Admittedly there's income verification anyway if they have doubts, but this isn't an area that would be smart to color outside the lines on frankly: likely best case scenario is you get written off on the application completely by the lender.
Another strategy is to get a card from a company known for giving high credit limits, such as American Express, and since Amex credit limit increase requests are soft pulls, you can basically request one every 6 months, or 3 months after a denial. A third way is to get multiple cards from a company that allows transferring credit limits between cards (Chase, and American Express).
This!
Example scenarios:
Apply for an AMEX card, they approve you initially for $10K. Provided you are responsible with that card it can grow to $30K in only 61 days - with income verification. Without, the max is $25K I believe.
Apply for a few Chase cards, signature cards preferably (CSP,Marriott Rewards, Freedom signature, Ritz) because these have a min CL of $5K. Once you obtain these cards, consolidate all of the CLs onto one card -- this will close out the other "donor" cards.
So, you can see that it is easy to build out a couple of high CL cards (One big AMEX card, one big Chase card).
769 ![]() | 774 ![]() | 764 ![]() | UTIL: 2% | AAoA: 5yr 8mos | Total Credit Line: $873,950 |
In my opinion, income is the main factor in determining CL along with scores, payment history, utilities, etc. For example, I was just approved for the Citi DC with a low credit limit with high scores but low income which makes perfect sense to me even with a 4+ years perfect history with my Diamond Preferred.
High score + low income = Low CL
After all, my high scores are not going to pay the bills.
@OnTheRebound wrote:In my opinion, income is the main factor in determining CL along with scores, payment history, utilities, etc. For example, I was just approved for the Citi DC with a low credit limit with high scores but low income which makes perfect sense to me even with a 4+ years perfect history with my Diamond Preferred.
High score + low income = Low CL
After all, my high scores are not going to pay the bills.
Keep in mind, higher score is very beneficial. Many computer models are based on that (I mean automatic approval). Of course other factors still play its own role.....Like AAoA, Income, Limits on other cards, other loans etc.
@s_haliz wrote:
@OnTheRebound wrote:In my opinion, income is the main factor in determining CL along with scores, payment history, utilities, etc. For example, I was just approved for the Citi DC with a low credit limit with high scores but low income which makes perfect sense to me even with a 4+ years perfect history with my Diamond Preferred.
High score + low income = Low CL
After all, my high scores are not going to pay the bills.
Keep in mind, higher score is very beneficial. Many computer models are based on that (I mean automatic approval). Of course other factors still play its own role.....Like AAoA, Income, Limits on other cards, other loans etc.
For a strictly higher limit.....income and assets is the biggest factor. For instance, a lot of celebrities (and some wealthy people) have crap credit scores but a lot of their cards are $50k + limits all because of the income and available assets.
@DrZoidberg wrote:
@s_haliz wrote:
@OnTheRebound wrote:In my opinion, income is the main factor in determining CL along with scores, payment history, utilities, etc. For example, I was just approved for the Citi DC with a low credit limit with high scores but low income which makes perfect sense to me even with a 4+ years perfect history with my Diamond Preferred.
High score + low income = Low CL
After all, my high scores are not going to pay the bills.
Keep in mind, higher score is very beneficial. Many computer models are based on that (I mean automatic approval). Of course other factors still play its own role.....Like AAoA, Income, Limits on other cards, other loans etc.
For a strictly higher limit.....income and assets is the biggest factor. For instance, a lot of celebrities (and some wealthy people) have crap credit scores but a lot of their cards are $50k + limits all because of the income and available assets.
Exactly. Although I have low income, my wife and I have plenty of assets, liquid and otherwise (PIF real and personal property). But Citi doesn't know that. I suppose if I gave Citi proof of our assets I could convince them to up my CL to $10K? I don't know. But I'm not going to do that. $3.8K is plenty for what I'm going to use it for. I just wanted a card that gives better cash back on non 5% categories.
FWIW- My wife and I are in our 60's, retired, not rich, just very comfortable and not concerned about leaving anything to our kids as they are doing quite well on their own.