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Never trust simulators - there are too many moving parts in a credit file for those to be of any real use.
Honestly, the only way to significantly reduce it is to pay it faster.
For many people, student loans are the oldest tradeline, so just pay it and enjoy the nice, long, steady account that adds to your credit mix, or pay it as fast as you can if you really want it down (which won't have much of an effect until it's really low, like 9% of the original amount).
@tmr is right - if it's about your FICO score, something else is keeping it low, not the student loan (unless it is full of derogatories).
No, the 5 you have is more than sufficient. I meant more along the lines of a longer positive payment history. Those good payments will continue to rack up over time. So the more positive history you have, the more it will help offset the sting of the BK for your scores to increase. More cards won't do you any good... only time and payments will. Build on that 5 year AAoA - the higher your AAoA, the better. See where your scores are in a year when the BK passes the 2 year mark post discharge - i'm thinking you'll hit at least 680, if not a bit higher. I honestly don't think you need to do anything different right now... it really is just a waiting game for you at this point (which sucks).
Just curious - what is the age of your youngest account?
7 months. All 5 of my accounts post BK are between 7 and 10 months old.
@thornback wrote:Just curious - what is the age of your youngest account?
@CashBackQueen wrote:7 months. All 5 of my accounts post BK are between 7 and 10 months old.
Oh then you definately just need time. You should see a bit of a score boost once your youngest passes the 1 year mark (the amount of the boost varies based on profile, so I cannot estimate for you); another boost after your youngest reaches 2 years -- by that time, your BK will be around / at 3 years. There are also some data points indicating a 6.5 year AAoA threshold - so you may see more of an increase in 1.5 years when your AAoA hits 6.5 yrs. No more new accounts, work with what you have and hang tight... Good things are coming your way.
Thanks. Can’t wait to see what it looks like in 5 months