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After a year and a half of credit rebuilding, I recently lost my mortgage approval because I paid off a loan early in the summer and instantly lost 10 points for that and then another 20 points just for paying a credit card down from $66 to 0. ( I think all cards reported as zero that month.) Since then, I've been watching my score drop slowly but steadily. Not by a lot but always a couple of points a week and it never comes back up. I have 4 cards, keep a zero balance on all except one and pay that one off every month after letting a small balance report. But to no avail. Today, I lost another 2 points because one of my credit cards increased my limit by $1000. I didn't ask for it, it was just automatically increased. I thought having a higher total credit limit increased scores? I certainly didn't expect to see another drop from this. Can anyone explain why this happened?
The CLI most likely coincided with another change. Check report line by line.
Its possible to lose points on closed loan. Was that your only installment loan?
You experienced the All Zero penalty. Continue AZEO.
If that was your only loan. Theres the culprit. And never have all accounts report no balance or all cards report a balance. FICO dings you for it. If you can get in with NFCU and get an SSL. That will help.
@js400021 wrote:After a year and a half of credit rebuilding, I recently lost my mortgage approval because I paid off a loan early in the summer and instantly lost 10 points for that and then another 20 points just for paying a credit card down from $66 to 0. ( I think all cards reported as zero that month.) Since then, I've been watching my score drop slowly but steadily. Not by a lot but always a couple of points a week and it never comes back up. I have 4 cards, keep a zero balance on all except one and pay that one off every month after letting a small balance report. But to no avail. Today, I lost another 2 points because one of my credit cards increased my limit by $1000. I didn't ask for it, it was just automatically increased. I thought having a higher total credit limit increased scores? I certainly didn't expect to see another drop from this. Can anyone explain why this happened?
The increase in credit limit did not cause a score drop.
Where are you getting your scores? Are they FICO or Vantage?
I'm getting my scores from Myfico.com. The notification just says "All Bankcard account(s) credit limit increased" -1 pt. and details the card that has the $1000 increase. Makes no sense that I was penalized for that. In answer to the other question, I do still have an open school loan and had this open when I paid off the second loan. I had read on here several times that it wouldn't drop if there was another open loan so I was pretty miffed when I saw that big drop. My school loan it small but still above 80%.
The notifications are not necessarily connected to the score change.
If the other loan was paid down then paying it off increased your aggregate installment utilization and could’ve caused a score decrease.
at two points it's really too small to tell a lot of times
@Anonymous wrote:The notifications are not necessarily connected to the score change.
If the other loan was paid down then paying it off increased your aggregate installment utilization and could’ve caused a score decrease.
at two points it's really too small to tell a lot of times
@js400021 I agree with this.
I got hit with a score decrease after closing my SSL (15K loan with a 500+ balance). Open SLs (9 of them) are the only open loans remaining with individual utility of approximately 80 - 85% each. The SLs were appro
IMO, this was a big change in my aggregate installment utility.
I went form an aggregate loan utility of about 45% up to approximately 69% (23K owned on 48K to 22K owed on 33K)
Sadly, when seeking score increases one could expend a great deal of energy and time only to find out there is so much more to learn about Fico factors.
Another classic MF Fail in score changes not being related to the provided alert reason, a problem that has been ongoing for years.