hmmm...my score is 728...says I've only had credit for 2 years, however, I've had my TD Visa since 1993...very strange...I'm kind of bummed out now
@Lightcycle thanks again...I've only ever had one credit card which is always paid in full monthly...my last car loan was in 2007...I don't use by now pay later financing for anything...mortgages always paid on time...I'm boring...LMAO
Credit score is only one factor. If you're above 700, banks will let you borrow until your credit payments, rent, HLW reach 42% of your gross income. If you'd inside those limits, and you have no negative history with you bank - a computer will approve your credit. Most banks will pre-approve credit (meaning if you apply, you're already approved) for clients with credit scores 700+ after a year.Don't worry about it. Anything over 700 is normal and you'll get approved for anything pretty much automatically.
Here's a chart to make you feel better:
There should be a section in your credit report that explains why you didn't achieve a higher score.
Again, sometimes it's counter-intuitive. I haven't had a mortgage in over 20 years, so my score got dinged for that because apparently I didn't have a good mix of credit types (card, car loan, line of credit, etc).
Some people with the best finances, ie. those with high net worth and little use for credit, actually have pretty average scores because the credit bureaus don't have a lot of historical information about them.
That's a new term for me... and I taught thousands of credit card specialists, credit adjucators and collections officers at Canada's biggest credit card issuer.Yeah, the credit card companies actually have a term for people who pay off their balance every month... they call them "deadbeats".
Obviously, they prefer their customers to carry a balance and pay tons of interest every month.
You likely have a thin crefit profile. When you don't use credit, it's hard to judge how you behave when you need credit.@Lightcycle thanks again...I've only ever had one credit card which is always paid in full monthly...my last car loan was in 2007...I don't use by now pay later financing for anything...mortgages always paid on time...I'm boring...LMAO
That's a new term for me... and I taught thousands of credit card specialists, credit adjucators and collections officers at Canada's biggest credit card issuer.
I guess if it's on the internet, it must be true!
"Deadbeat:" Although "deadbeat" normally means "one who does not pay one's debts, the word has taken on a new meaning for credit card companies. For them, "deadbeat" means someone who avoids interest and fees by paying her/his account balance in full each month rather than paying the minimum amount and carrying a balance. Credit card companies do not earn much from these cardholders. About 55 million Americans pay their bills in full each month.
When my grandpa died, my dad took my grandma to get all the bank accounts changed over to her name and a new credit card, since the card she had been using basically all of her adult life was in my grandpa's name. The bank originally wouldn't give her one. At that point my grandma was 75, never had an actual job or any reportable income, her name was never on the mortgage, a car loan, credit card, cell phone, phone bill, nothing. Zero credit history.
Took some convincing by the bank manager to someone at Visa to get her a card - "She's got $xxxK sitting in her account, she'll pay it, don't worry!"
Not saying it isn't a thing, just that I never heard it before, and I spent a long time in the credit card side of banking.Yeah... also the PBS... such an unreliable source:
I think I paid less than 300$ in credit card interest….and that’s because I forgot a due date and it added up.
Yup! The interest isn't calculated from the 'Due Date'...it's calculated from the purchased item 'Posted Date' so in effect...if you buy Nov 1, with a due date of Dec 31...the interest gets calculated from Nov 1...not Dec 31.The CC companies are vicious when it comes to applying interest.
I forgot to make a payment once and the interest that racked up the next statement seemed entirely out of line with the stated APR.
Called them up to complain, and instead, I got quite the education on how interest is calculated.
On the first day of a late payment, they calculate the average daily balance on your card for the *entire month*. It's not a single day's worth of interest. It's an entire month's worth of interest.
And on top of this, the interest is *compounded daily*!
If you miss a month, you could potentially be paying up to two months in interest charges, depending on when your purchases were made. My rate was 29%...
Never made that mistake again.
Lot of people don't understand this concept...I didn't either. Then I learned.
I know someone that did that in retirement. They called in the second day. I'm not coming back!I've also thought about quitting and going to work at Walmart as a greeter (just to get something with less stress) LOL