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Credit Do's and
Don'ts:
1.
DON’T APPLY FOR NEW CREDIT OF ANY KIND.
Including those “You have been pre-approved”
credit card invitations that you receive in the
mail. Every time that you have your credit pulled
by a potential creditor or lender, you lose points
from your credit score immediately. Depending on
the elements in your current credit report, you
could lose anywhere from 2-50 points for one hard
inquiry.
2.
DON’T PAY OFF COLLECTIONS OR CHARGE OFFS
during the loan process. Paying collections will
decrease the credit score immediately due to the
date of last activity becoming recent. If you want
to pay off old accounts, do it through escrow, and
make sure that 1) you validate that the debt is
yours, and 2) that the creditor agrees to give you
a letter of deletion.
3.
DON’T CLOSE CREDIT CARD ACCOUNTS.
If you close a credit card account it will appear
to the FICO that your debt ratio has gone up.
Also, closing a card will affect other factors in
the score such as length of credit history. If you
have to close a credit card account, do it after
closing, and make sure it is a more recent
account.
4.
DON’T MAX OUT OR OVER CHARGE ON YOUR CREDIT CARD
ACCOUNTS.
This is the fastest way to bring your score down
50-100 points immediately. Try to keep your credit
card balances below 30% of their available limit
at all times during the loan process. If you
decide to pay down balances, do it across the
board. Meaning, make an extra payment on all of
your cards at the same time.
5.
DON’T CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT ONTO 1 OR 2 CREDIT
CARDS.
It seems like it would be the smart thing to do,
however, when you consolidate all of your debt
onto one card, it appears that you are maxed out
on that card, and the system will penalize you as
mentioned above in 4. If you want to save money on
credit card interest rates, wait until after
closing.
6.
DON’T DO ANYTHING THAT WILL CAUSE A RED FLAG TO BE
RAISED BY THE SCORING SYSTEM.
This would include adding new accounts, co-signing
on a loan, changing your name or address with the
bureaus. The less activity on your reports during
the loan process, the better.
7.
DO JOIN A CREDIT WATCH PROGRAM.
If you join a credit watch program, you can check
your reports weekly, or even daily depending on
the program you select. (When you pull your own
reports, you don’t get dinged for a hard inquiry.)
This way, if something does show up on your
reports that has caused your score to go down,
you’ll know it immediately, and you may be
able to take care of the problem before closing.
8.
DO STAY CURRENT ON EXISTINGING ACCOUNTS.
Like your mortgage and car payments. One 30-day
late can cost you anywhere from 30-75.
9.
DO CONTINUE TO USE YOUR CREDIT AS NORMAL.
Red Flags are raised easily with the scoring
system. If it appears that you are changing your
pattern, it will raise a red flag, and your score
could go down.
10. DO GO HLU
if you receive something in the mail from a
creditor or collection agency that you may be able
to supply you with the resources you need to stop
any derogatory reporting to the bureaus.
Your broker may be able to supply you with the
resources you need to stop any derogatory
reporting to the
bureaus |