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Old 04-02-2008, 12:01 PM
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Default Credit Card Maximums

If you have $500 in credit card debt, and your maximum is $10,000...

Which option is best for your credit score:

a) Reduce your maximum to <x> (specify x).
b) Do nothing. Keep max and keep paying it off asap.
c) Buy things with the credit card and pay them off before interest accumulates.
d) none of the above
e) some combo of the above
f) other

Thanks!
ea1776
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Old 04-02-2008, 12:04 PM
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You don't want to do a) because that will raise your utilization ratio which can lower your score. It is better to have unused credit. So I would do b). Pay off the debt and don't ever go into credit card debt again. If you use credit, pay the bill in full every month.
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Old 04-02-2008, 01:48 PM
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Does your credit limit show up on your credit report? Many CC companies don't publish customer limits (as high limits indicate good customers for other companies to lure away).

I have one personal card (very high limit) and one business card (moderate limit) and the card with the high limit does not show up on my credit report.
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Old 04-02-2008, 02:26 PM
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Yeah, I was wondering, because I heard two different things from two different people.

One person said it is good to have lower maximums because that shows that you have less *potential* to go into high debt (thereby being less attractive to lenders).

Another person told me that you want your balance to be as far away as possible from the max.

I suppose the above two are not mutually exclusive. For example, you could have a very low min. (i.e. $2500) and no balance... I'm just wondering where the happy medium is. I currently have about 14K in CC debt that I'm chipping away at aggressively. The max is currently set to 17K, and I'm wondering if I should just stay put.

Thanks for the input!
ea1776
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Old 04-02-2008, 03:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ea1776 View Post
I currently have about 14K in CC debt that I'm chipping away at aggressively. The max is currently set to 17K, and I'm wondering if I should just stay put.
That's a lot different than what you said in the first post ($500 debt with a max of 10K). You need to pay that down until your balance is no more than 50% of your limit and ideally less than 30%. That's when you should see your score rise. Ultimately, of course, you want your balance to be zero.
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Old 04-04-2008, 12:49 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ea1776 View Post
If you have $500 in credit card debt, and your maximum is $10,000...

Which option is best for your credit score:

a) Reduce your maximum to <x> (specify x).
b) Do nothing. Keep max and keep paying it off asap.
c) Buy things with the credit card and pay them off before interest accumulates.
d) none of the above
e) some combo of the above
f) other

Thanks!
ea1776

f) Pay off your balance in full each and every month and never accumulate interest expenses on your card.

If there's already debts on the card, then pay by "debit card" or cash until you've paid off the cc in full.

Do NOT add new debts to the credit card while trying to pay down old debts -- it's a vicious circle that you cannot win.
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Old 04-04-2008, 04:52 AM
maat55 maat55 is offline
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You do NOT want to buy your credit score. Good money managemnet does not include wasting money on interest. Like stated above, pay your cards in FULL. The whole point to having a card is to earn so called rewards without paying interest. Higher scars will follow.
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Old 04-04-2008, 05:37 AM
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1. How you pay your bills (35 percent of the score)
The most important factor is how you've paid your bills in the past, placing the most emphasis on recent activity. Paying all your bills on time is good. Paying them late on a consistent basis is bad. Having accounts that were sent to collections is worse. Declaring bankruptcy is worst.

2. Amount of money you owe and the amount of available credit (30 percent)
The second most important area is your outstanding debt -- how much money you owe on credit cards, car loans, mortgages, home equity lines, etc. Also considered is the total amount of credit you have available. If you have 10 credit cards that each have $10,000 credit limits, that's $100,000 of available credit. Statistically, people who have a lot of credit available tend to use it, which makes them a less attractive credit risk.

"Carrying a lot of debt doesn't necessarily mean you'll have a lower score," Watts says. "It doesn't hurt as much as carrying close to the maximum. People who consistently max out their balances are perceived as riskier. People who never use their credit don't have a track history. People with the highest scores use credit sparingly and keep their balances low."

3. Length of credit history (15 percent)
The third factor is the length of your credit history. The longer you've had credit -- particularly if it's with the same credit issuers -- the more points you get.

4. Mix of credit (10 percent)
The best scores will have a mix of both revolving credit, such as credit cards, and installment credit, such as mortgages and car loans. "Statistically, consumers with a richer variety of experiences are better credit risks," Watts says. "They know how to handle money."

5. New credit applications (10 percent)
The final category is your interest in new credit -- how many credit applications you're filling out. The model compensates for people who are rate shopping for the best mortgage or car loan rates. The only time shopping really hurts your score, Watts says, is when you have previous recent credit stumbles, such as late payments or bills sent to collections.

"Then, looking for new credit will be seen as an alarm because statistically, before people declare bankruptcy and default on everything, they look for a life preserver," Watts says. Also, if you have a very young credit file, an inquiry can count for more than if you've had credit for a long time.

Source: How credit scores work, how a score is calculated (Page 1 of 3)
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Old 04-16-2008, 03:34 AM
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pay off the debt. that way you wont pay interest and "waste" it like a pp said
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