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Hi everyone thanks for viewing my thread. Here is a brief history of my situation:
In Feb 2017 i lost my job and quickly got into a crap ton of debt for a 25 year old. Fastforward a year and a half and in November 2018 my Ch7 bk was discharged. Shortly after, dad made me an AU on the costco citi. I do believe this helped me quite a bit despite almost always being around 70%+ utilization (dad's spending, not mine). In April 2019 I opened a self lender installment loan hoping to diversify my credit and hopefully get the ball rolling and have basically left everything alone since then. Earlier this week I decided it might be time to open a CC all my own. Figured it wouldn't hurt to start aging some accounts up and hopefully dilute my utilization rate on the costco citi card.
So, last tuesday I pulled my FICO 8 (589) and applied for the Capital one Platinum and to my surprise, received an auto approval for $1,500, woohoo!
Now that I'm all motivated to continue increasing my score, I have a few Q's:
What would be the best thing to do concerning the AU card now that i have my own? Should I request to be removed asap? The chances of this card ever being below 9% utilization are pretty slim, but it is giving me 100% payment history since 2016.
If i were to keep the AU card (with it's high balance), should I keep my new card reporting $0?
Anybody have insight regarding how to get the highest CLI when my cap1 comes up for review after my first 5 payments?
Thanks!!
J
@OmarGB9 wrote:
That high utilization outweighs the length of credit benefit because utilization accounts for 35% of your score, while length of credit history accounts for 10%.
Isn't it payment history that accounts for 35% of your score? And then amount of debt is another 30%ish?
@Anonymous wrote:
@OmarGB9 wrote:
That high utilization outweighs the length of credit benefit because utilization accounts for 35% of your score, while length of credit history accounts for 10%.Isn't it payment history that accounts for 35% of your score? And then amount of debt is another 30%ish?
yes and yes
@Anonymous wrote:
@OmarGB9 wrote:
That high utilization outweighs the length of credit benefit because utilization accounts for 35% of your score, while length of credit history accounts for 10%.Isn't it payment history that accounts for 35% of your score? And then amount of debt is another 30%ish?
Well either way, my point was that length of history is only worth about a third of what utilization is worth in terms of score. Therefore my advice to OP would be to remove himself.
It sounds like your plan is to let the Cap One card and Self loan brew for a while before trying much else. So, I would say it doesn't matter that much whether you remove the card or leave it, for now. If I had to pick, I'd say remove, but I think it's ok to wait until you have additional credit goals if you like. JMO, and either way, good luck!