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@Revelate wrote:BBS where are you getting your TU 04 score regularly?
My mortgage lender (Mr. Cooper/Nationstar) provides it to me monthly. The only thing I don't like is that there is no history there, like the line graph for example that you'd get from a Citi or Discover account.
@Bay_Area_Joe wrote:Who really knows...
On my 850, they are showing items that are affecting my score.... Really ? ?
Out of curiosity, what is your aggregate utilization percentage and what is your highest individual card utilization? If those numbers are below 8.9% and 28.9%, respectively, I'm wondering if dollars are a consideration here?
@Anonymous wrote:
That’s exactly what I was thinking BBS! And it doesn’t make sense I thought you were allowed to have balances on less than half of your accounts without penalty.
I think that's a generalization that's true most of the time, but there are exceptions. EQ seems to be more sensitive here, often imposing the first penalty at 33% of accounts with balances where TU typically is OK with anything until one reaches 50%.
@Anonymous wrote:
@Revelate wrote:BBS where are you getting your TU 04 score regularly?
My mortgage lender (Mr. Cooper/Nationstar) provides it to me monthly. The only thing I don't like is that there is no history there, like the line graph for example that you'd get from a Citi or Discover account.
Oh bleh.
If it were anything but a mortgage or auto lender only I'd open some sort of account just to get access to that score but short of a refinance if rates drop again to improve cash flow (or ARM to airstrike the balance with said improved cash flow) it's basically a non-starter.
TU 04 is the only mortgage score I don't regularly have access to and would be nice to have monthly access to it as a freebie.
@Revelate wrote:
TU 04 is the only mortgage score I don't regularly have access to and would be nice to have monthly access to it as a freebie.
Gotcha. Where do you get your other 2 mortgage scores from? I'd of course like to find a regular (free) source of those 2. I'd imagine that mortgage lenders are likely the most common providers of these scores and since most individuals don't have more than 1 mortgage, they may not have regular access to more than 1 of the 3 scores. I can always grab EX mortgage with a $1 trial at Experian, which I've done before, but aside from getting your 28 FICO scores through this site for $30 I'm not sure about an EQ mortgage source.