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@NRB525 wrote:
@tonyjones wrote:I never understood when people here say to leave all balances $0 except one card at 1-10%. It seems like FICO dings you for any revolving account with $0 balance.
I don't think there is any science to that idea at all. It's a case where the most particular people use that as a way to get utilization down, they see a score drop when the cards come out of zero balance, and conclude the card needs to stay at zero balance. The real issue is, utilization should be kept low, overall. One card reporting 1%-9% does that nicely, but it's the utilization overall, not the "only one card with balance" that affects the score.
FICO scores both overall and individual utilization.
@MarineVietVet wrote:
@NRB525 wrote:
@tonyjones wrote:I never understood when people here say to leave all balances $0 except one card at 1-10%. It seems like FICO dings you for any revolving account with $0 balance.
I don't think there is any science to that idea at all. It's a case where the most particular people use that as a way to get utilization down, they see a score drop when the cards come out of zero balance, and conclude the card needs to stay at zero balance. The real issue is, utilization should be kept low, overall. One card reporting 1%-9% does that nicely, but it's the utilization overall, not the "only one card with balance" that affects the score.
FICO scores both overall and individual utilization.
I did a BT a few weeks ago, moved $720 from my CapOne to the Diamond Prefered $1k limit card, so that Citi DP went to 72% utilization. The CapOne has not come around the cycle to reduce it's balance, no other balances reported changes, so when the Citi DP reported a few days ago, it looked like:
Citi DP goes from $0 reported to $721, 0% Util to 72% Util on that card on EX.
Total balances reported went up by $721. This is the TU display.
EX went down 1 point, from 732 to 731
TU went down 4 points, from 720 to 716.
EQ, which was already at 698, has not budged, and enough days have passed for it to trigger anything. EQ has not moved in nearly a month.
In this case of $720 added to open amounts, was the score decline because total amounts outstanding appeared to rise by $720, or because one card went to 72% utilization? Or, is it because this card went from $0 to reporting something, thus "taking on new debt"? Lots of potential interpretations.
I will grant there may be some influence by individual cards, but in my opinion, the amount is not noticeable and is not distinguishable from total balances increasing. If there are big moves when someone reports utilization increases, it is because either total utilization changes a lot, or there are other things going on in the file that are not on that alert. It is also very difficult to separate high utilization on one card from overall high utilization.
@NRB525 wrote:
@MarineVietVet wrote:
@NRB525 wrote:
@tonyjones wrote:I never understood when people here say to leave all balances $0 except one card at 1-10%. It seems like FICO dings you for any revolving account with $0 balance.
I don't think there is any science to that idea at all. It's a case where the most particular people use that as a way to get utilization down, they see a score drop when the cards come out of zero balance, and conclude the card needs to stay at zero balance. The real issue is, utilization should be kept low, overall. One card reporting 1%-9% does that nicely, but it's the utilization overall, not the "only one card with balance" that affects the score.
FICO scores both overall and individual utilization.
I did a BT a few weeks ago, moved $720 from my CapOne to the Diamond Prefered $1k limit card, so that Citi DP went to 72% utilization. The CapOne has not come around the cycle to reduce it's balance, no other balances reported changes, so when the Citi DP reported a few days ago, it looked like:
Citi DP goes from $0 reported to $721, 0% Util to 72% Util on that card on EX.
Total balances reported went up by $721. This is the TU display.
EX went down 1 point, from 732 to 731
TU went down 4 points, from 720 to 716.
EQ, which was already at 698, has not budged, and enough days have passed for it to trigger anything. EQ has not moved in nearly a month.
In this case of $720 added to open amounts, was the score decline because total amounts outstanding appeared to rise by $720, or because one card went to 72% utilization? Or, is it because this card went from $0 to reporting something, thus "taking on new debt"? Lots of potential interpretations.
I will grant there may be some influence by individual cards, but in my opinion, the amount is not noticeable and is not distinguishable from total balances increasing. If there are big moves when someone reports utilization increases, it is because either total utilization changes a lot, or there are other things going on in the file that are not on that alert. It is also very difficult to separate high utilization on one card from overall high utilization.
That is your experience but doesn't mean it will work that way for everyone. As always YMMV.
Although more weight is given to overall utilization scoring also looks at individual accounts and the influence of each account balance is important and needs to be kept in mind.
Where did I get this information? From a former administrator of this site.
@MarineVietVet wrote:
@NRB525 wrote:
I will grant there may be some influence by individual cards, but in my opinion, the amount is not noticeable and is not distinguishable from total balances increasing. If there are big moves when someone reports utilization increases, it is because either total utilization changes a lot, or there are other things going on in the file that are not on that alert. It is also very difficult to separate high utilization on one card from overall high utilization.
That is your experience but doesn't mean it will work that way for everyone. As always YMMV.
Although more weight is given to overall utilization scoring also looks at individual accounts and the influence of each account balance is important and needs to be kept in mind.
Where did I get this information? From a former administrator of this site.
That may be, however I doubt the former administrator could state the impact as a range of points, in a stable file, from having more cards report.
My main argument is not that one can eek out a few more points by going all but one zero. Rather, all but one as zero is not what normal people do. And even if someone uses their cards such that those cards report amounts on the statement and PIF, that person is not going to have a noticeable score difference from someone who goes all zero but one, if they both report the same utilization dollar total and the files are otherwise equivalent. And the person who uses their cards normally, paying by due date is not going to have the angst of getting a card that was zero suddenly reporting a balance.
I know, I'm not changing your mind, and that's fine. Cheers!