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The apartment we live in now has us paying the electric and cable/internet. |
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Never took out a loan for either college or a vehicle? |
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You get good credit by having a modest number of accounts that are open and active. In some cases having no credit is worse than having poor credit. |
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My vehicle was given to me by my grandpa. I do have a couple loans for college but I think they had to be put under my dads name until I graduate. |
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Maybe I'm wrong... I'm also not surprised that the cheaper rent houses are not in the greatest of neighborhoods. I'd stick with an apartment scene for now. Sure, it sucks for the dog... but, it's short term. |
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We almost have to use the A/C in here. Electric is probably 100 a month here. It gets really hot in here without, opening the windows doesn't offer much cooling. We must be in the bad part of the complex, not much of an opening for windows to get outside air. |
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What I am saying is, the credit report people don't see that I paid off a credit card 5 months in advance? |
http://www.myfico.com/
Check that site out - there's a forums section that could be helpful for questions like this one. And, there's a TON of helpful info all over the site. |
It depends on what your long-term goals are. Do you want to eventually own a home? Take the option that will allow you to save a down payment quicker. Don't accumulate stuff/debt now...there'll be plenty of time for that. And start building your credit. Get a couple credit cards, make minor purchases each month ($50 - $100) and pay them off in full each month. With most CCs, you won't be charged any interest if you pay off the balance within one billing cycle. If you do go the apt route, try to find out (not sure how) their policy on returning deposits. There are a lot of apt complexes that will literally make stuff up so they don't have to give your $$ back.
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I'll check it out. What angers me is checking apartments on here and they look good but then you go and drive by them and they look like crap. |
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Usually, it a good idea to buy stuff that is around the $400 to $600 and most stores have that gimmick of 12 months no interest for purchases of $399 and up. Start off paying off those first to build up your credit. For example, in March of this year, at Circuit City, I recently bought a new computer, with Windows Vista, 3.0 Ghz, 2 GB RAM, 22 inch widescreen monitor and it had a free printer/fax/scanner in one, thrown in the package. 14 months, no interest for it. It costed me $1150, but I got $320 back from rebates, and I used that to chuck off part of the payments. And I'm deftinaly gonna get this paid off before the end of the year, easily. About $500 more to go. |
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That's what I've been thinking. Long-term an apartment could save us an easy 150+ a month and over a year or two (two years left for school) and we could easily use it for a down payment on a house. We'll have to get a new car sometime when we get married both of ours aren't the best and are high mileage. I could just see us easily paying over 1K on a house, bills, auto insurence, health insurence, etc. When we would only be making 2K a month. What if something happened to a vehicle, would we have to wait to fix it because we don't have the money. With an apartment, saving that money, we could fix something real quick. As my brother said "if you say you can afford this place, it doesn't mean you should go get it". Find cheaper stuff, he says to get an apartment. The more I talk to you guys and him, I'm hoping we can just get an apartment. |
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Funny story. The other day I found a 3bdrm, 1.5 bath for 500. The old lady says "real quiet neighborhood". We go to check it out and the first people we see in the neighborhood are 3 cop cars with lights flashing at one of the houses. |
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