tools_credit.title

tools_credit.subtitle

tools_credit.current_score
tools_credit.current_score_desc
720
tools_credit.category.good
720
300 (tools_credit.category.poor)580 (tools_credit.category.fair)670 (tools_credit.category.good)740 (tools_credit.category.vg_short)850 (tools_credit.category.exc_short)
tools_credit.calculated_score378
tools_credit.credit_factors
tools_credit.credit_factors_desc
tools_credit.weight
95%

tools_credit.factors.payment_history.description

tools_credit.weight
70%

tools_credit.factors.utilization.description

tools_credit.weight
50%

tools_credit.factors.age.description

tools_credit.weight
80%

tools_credit.factors.mix.description

tools_credit.weight
80%

tools_credit.factors.new_credit.description

0

tools_credit.derogatory_marks_help

tools_credit.financial_actions
tools_credit.financial_actions_desc

tools_credit.actions.new_card.name

-10 tools_credit.pts

tools_credit.actions.new_card.description

tools_credit.recovery_months

tools_credit.actions.miss_payment.name

-40 tools_credit.pts

tools_credit.actions.miss_payment.description

tools_credit.recovery_months

tools_credit.actions.pay_down.name

+15 tools_credit.pts

tools_credit.actions.pay_down.description

tools_credit.recovery_months

tools_credit.actions.installment_loan.name

+5 tools_credit.pts

tools_credit.actions.installment_loan.description

tools_credit.recovery_months

tools_credit.actions.close_account.name

-20 tools_credit.pts

tools_credit.actions.close_account.description

tools_credit.recovery_months

tools_credit.quick_adjustments

95%
30%
tools_credit.impact_analysis
tools_credit.impact_analysis_desc

tools_credit.biggest_improvements

  • tools_credit.improvements.reduce_util+15-30 tools_credit.pts
  • tools_credit.improvements.on_time+20-40 tools_credit.pts
  • tools_credit.improvements.remove_derog+25+ tools_credit.pts_each

tools_credit.common_mistakes

  • tools_credit.mistakes.missed_payment-40-60 tools_credit.pts
  • tools_credit.mistakes.max_out-10-30 tools_credit.pts
  • tools_credit.mistakes.multiple_inquiries-5-10 tools_credit.pts_each

Understanding Your Credit Score

Your credit score is a single number — typically between 300 and 850 — that lenders use to predict how likely you are to repay borrowed money on time. It influences whether you are approved for a mortgage, auto loan, or credit card; the interest rate you are offered; the size of the credit line; and even non-credit decisions like apartment applications, utility deposits, and some insurance premiums. Over a lifetime, the difference between excellent and fair credit can easily exceed $100,000 in extra interest.

This simulator lets you experiment with the moves that change a score — paying down balances, opening or closing accounts, missing a payment, having a derogatory mark fall off your report — and see the rough impact before you act. Use it to plan ahead of a major loan application, recover from a setback, or simply understand why your score moved last month.

How a FICO Score Is Weighted

The most widely used credit scoring model, FICO, weighs five categories of information from your credit reports. The weights below are approximate and apply to most consumers; thin or new credit files may be weighted differently.

  • 35%Payment history — whether bills are paid on time. The single biggest factor.
  • 30%Amounts owed (credit utilization) — total balances relative to total credit limits.
  • 15%Length of credit history — average age of your accounts and age of your oldest account.
  • 10%Credit mix — variety of account types (cards, installment loans, mortgages).
  • 10%New credit — recent applications and newly opened accounts.

Two of the five categories — payment history and utilization — drive about 65% of the score. If you focus your improvement effort on those two, you address the vast majority of what the model cares about.

The Math Behind the Score

Credit utilization is the most directly mathematical part of the score. It is calculated across all your revolving accounts at the moment your statement closes:

utilization = total balances / total credit limits

Conventional wisdom says keep utilization below 30%; the sweet spot for top-tier scores is below 10%. Each card's individual utilization also matters, not just the total — maxing out a single card hurts even if your overall utilization is low. Pay down before the statement closes (not before the due date) for the best score impact.

average account age = sum of account ages / number of accounts

Length of history is the average age of your accounts plus the age of your oldest account. Closing an old card reduces both — even if you stop using it, keeping a paid-off card open with a small recurring charge protects your score.

A Worked Example

Suppose your starting score is 680. You carry $4,500 across three credit cards with a combined limit of $10,000 — a 45% utilization. You have one 30-day late payment from 18 months ago and four credit cards with an average age of three years.

Paying balances down to $1,500 (15% utilization) typically lifts a score in this range by 30 to 50 points within one or two billing cycles. Bringing utilization below 10% can add another 10 to 20 points. The 30-day late will continue to drag the score until it falls off after seven years, but its impact diminishes after the first 24 months.

If you instead opened two new credit cards at once, your score would dip 10 to 20 points temporarily from the hard inquiries, lower the average account age, and raise total available credit (helping utilization). The net effect is usually negative for several months and positive after a year, assuming you do not run up balances.

The fastest legitimate score improvement is almost always paying down credit-card balances. It is more effective than disputing minor entries, opening new credit, or chasing exotic credit-repair tactics — and it produces results in weeks rather than years.

Credit Score FAQ

How fast can I improve my score?

Lowering credit-card utilization can lift a score within one to two billing cycles — often the fastest legitimate change. Other factors take longer: a single late payment hurts for 24 months and stays on your report for seven years; opening a new account requires time to age. Most realistic plans see meaningful improvement in three to six months.

Should I close credit cards I no longer use?

Usually no. Closing a card lowers your total available credit (raising utilization) and reduces the average age of your accounts as it eventually falls off your report. Keeping unused cards open with a small recurring charge — paid in full automatically — protects both factors. The exception is high-fee cards whose annual fee is no longer worth paying.

What is a hard inquiry?

A hard inquiry is a credit check by a lender when you apply for new credit. Each one typically costs 5–10 score points temporarily and stays on your report for two years (though scoring impact fades after 12 months). Multiple inquiries for the same loan type within a short window (usually 14–45 days) are treated as one inquiry — so rate-shopping for a mortgage or auto loan does not pile on damage.

Does checking my own credit hurt my score?

No. Checking your own credit is a soft inquiry and never affects your score. You can check as often as you like through free services or directly from the credit bureaus.

How long do negative items stay on my report?

Most negative items, including late payments, collections, and Chapter 13 bankruptcies, remain for seven years from the original delinquency date. Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays for ten years. Hard inquiries fall off after two years. As negative items age, their score impact decreases, even before they fall off.

Will paying off a collection improve my score?

It depends on the model. Newer FICO and VantageScore versions ignore paid medical collections and reduce the impact of other paid collections; older models still in use by some lenders may not. Always negotiate a 'pay-for-delete' agreement in writing before paying — some collectors will remove the entry entirely in exchange for payment.

How is credit utilization calculated?

It is the sum of your current balances on revolving accounts divided by the sum of credit limits. Utilization is reported when each statement closes — pay your balance down before that date (not just by the due date) to lower reported utilization. Each card's individual utilization also matters; maxing out one card hurts even if your aggregate utilization is low.

Should I get a credit-builder loan?

If you have thin or no credit history, yes — a small installment loan adds payment history and credit mix, both of which help the score over time. If you already have multiple aged accounts in good standing, the marginal benefit is small and the inquiry plus new-account dings may briefly outweigh it.

What is the difference between FICO and VantageScore?

Both are credit scoring models that use the same underlying credit-bureau data, but they weight factors slightly differently and may produce scores 10 to 50 points apart. Lenders mostly use FICO, especially for mortgages, but most free credit-monitoring services show VantageScore. Track the same model over time rather than comparing across models.

Can credit-repair companies help?

Reputable companies can help dispute inaccurate items, but they cannot legally remove accurate information no matter what they promise. Anything they can do, you can do for free yourself by directly disputing items with the credit bureaus. Avoid any company that asks for upfront fees, promises a specific score increase, or instructs you to dispute accurate items as fraud — that crosses into illegal territory.

These calculators are provided for educational and planning purposes only. Results are estimates based on the inputs you provide and do not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Actual loan terms, returns, and fees vary by lender, jurisdiction, and individual circumstances. Always consult a qualified professional before making major financial decisions.