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I buy a $5K or larger CD and then borrow against it. I then take the funds from that and put it in my account and set up automatic payments for the term of the loan (1Year). You can do this multiple times as I did starting out.
HAVING A BANK LOAN (or 3-4) HELPS A LOT BUT HAVING A BANK LOAN THAT WAS FULFILLED EVERY YEAR DOES WONDERS!!!! |
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That is interesting.. I would have thought paying them off in full each month would have hurt your credit score.
Did you cards raise your limits, by the way? |
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I HOPE THAT YOUR CREDIT CARDS HAVE AIRLINE MILEAGE AND HOTEL REWARDS ATTACHED TO THEM AS OPPOSED TO SIMPLE CARDS. IF NOT YOU SHOULD LOOK INTO A SWAP FOR AT LEAST ONE. There may be a point in your life where you want to open a business before or after retirement, may decide to buy a second home, or want an extravagant purchase that your great credit will come in handy. You should have a great financial planner who has estate knowledge as well. |
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What hurts a credit score is utilizing more than 70-80% of your available credit each month. People think charging to the limit and paying off is best and it is NOT. Charge about 60% on various cards and pay off each month and your credit score will skyrocket. Maxing out your credit limit on cards or home equity is NOT good. |
You're still a choad for arguing with me years ago that exactly what you're currently doing was a bad idea.
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I'm not going to read through all the responses to see if anyone has mentioned this, so sorry if this is duplicate info. I used to be a commercial and residential mortgage underwriter, so I dealt with credit extensively.
Credit cards report to the 3 credit bureaus (Trans Union, Equifax, & Experian) once a month minimum. It doesn't matter to them if you pay your card off every month, it only matters what your revolving credit-to-credit-limit ratio is on the day your info is reported. ****ed up, but that's how it is. In other words even if you pay your revolving balance(s) in full each month, if your cc balance on the day your cc company reports to the bureaus is $3K, and your cc limit is $4K, to the credit bureaus you're utilizing 75% of your available credit. That will smash your score, you need to always keep your revolving credit utilization ratio under 30% if you want a score over 750. It will definitely knock someone like you (who should be somewhere between 775-800+ if the info you laid out is accurate) down to the mid-600s. Even if you pay it off in full at the end of the month, to the credit bureaus, it only matters what your balance/credit limit is on the day your card reports to them. You need to increase the credit limit on the card you have or open an additional card(s), whether you plan to use the additional credit or not. I always keep my credit limits as high as possible for precisely this reason, even though I never use the credit. To verify this is what is hurting your score, pay your cc balance in full, then don't use the card again for at least a month-and-a-half. Then check your score, it should improve dramatically. |
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Another year has passed, 5 years since I started this quest and not much has changed... Don't think I will ever be able to achieve the perfect 850 score have about 50k of available credit on the cards, use less than 1% of my available credit and still have no debt... Think I have peaked and doubt it will go any higher....
so let me have it you 500 credit score trolls https://i.imgur.com/76LNCgT.png |
I sit with same score as you.
But I froze our credit last year (thanks data breach!) and won't be taking a loan out for anything in the near future hopefully. |
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