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I am so excited but confused as well. I paid a medical bill $111.00 that was with a CA; the account is 5 months. I paid it and did not expect my score to be effected but it jumped up to 11 points. Is the norm? I am new to the community and have been reading that if your account is at a CA and there is a balance; paying it would not effect your score. I am so excited, I plan to pay the other medical bill under that CA. But I plan to send them a PFD letter and a goodwill to remove the one with a $.0 balance.
I believe if the collection accounts are "new/recent" (like yours 5 months old) then yes, it would have a score impact if it was affecting your %util (which in your case it looks like it was). If the collections are years old, then it wouldn't make a score difference paying them.
Collections and public records are not factored in FICO util calculations. Charge-offs are a different story, tho.
@fused wrote:Collections and public records are not factored in FICO util calculations. Charge-offs are a different story, tho.
Oh... OK, someone on here did mentioned that if a collection was part of the %util, then it made a score difference...
@2NE1 wrote:
@fused wrote:Collections and public records are not factored in FICO util calculations. Charge-offs are a different story, tho.
Oh... OK, someone on here did mentioned that if a collection was part of the %util, then it made a score difference...
If it was a credit card or other revolving line of credit that wasn't paid in collections or charged off then yes it would make a difference to pay it and get current and get it out of the utility calculation.
Other kinds of collections being paid would not make a difference.
The OP needs to say what kind of a collection was paid and also IMO should puruse the reports carefully for other reasons the score could have gone up.