I have some 0% rates expiring on Credit Cards, so I want to transfer them in the way that makes the most sense and minimizes the hit on my FICO score. One goes to 14% and one to 12%, so I pretty much HAVE to transfer them, even if it does hurt my FICO score a little. I guess the key is to keep FICO in Tier 2, above 700. And yes, I do plan to work hard to start getting these balances down. I know they are killing me, since I am about at the end of the road for 0% rates.
Right now BoA is offering 0% and 3% rates to me. I have 3 cards with them.
Card 1: 0% expiring now, already transferred some to Capital One, need to transfer the rest somewhere else.
Card 2: 0% offer, fairly low limit.
Card 3: 3% offer, also fairly low limit.
And one with Wamu that I need to pay since it is going to 14% with a pretty big balance.
So I want to pay off Wamu with BoA 0%. And yes, I desperately want out of the CC juggling business.
BoA is offering to combine the last two into one so I can get more on the 0% offer, so I wonder how that will affect my FICO score. I am not sure of the details of how they will do that, i.e. will they close one, etc.
But the real question is how much does borrowing near the credit limit hurt my FICO score? Is it a continuous scale, or more of a tier system like the FICO score itself? I have seen 30% and 50% tossed around, but I was thinking more like 90% versus 70%, etc. I figure I CAN'T afford to pay 12-14% on a big balance, so it's better to take the FICO hit now and try to recover it.
On a similar subject, how about payments and FICO score? If making the minimum payment is bad for my FICO score, how much above minimum do I have to pay to fix that? $1? 120% of minimum? 150% 200% Is it a continuous or tier system? And would subscribing to something like Score Watch at myfico.com show that kind of detail? I'm going to watch the demo now and I'll report back with what I find. Actually I guess I just need the detailed calculation algorithm, or a calculator like the nice one Wamu has on their website but maybe a little more detailed. They do have a very nice feature, where it tells you the one thing you can do to raise FICO. It says two things - pay down the debt (duh!) and make more than minimum payments, but of course paying down the debt to limit ratio is not feasible for me now, but making slightly bigger than minimum payments is.
Thank you! And I promise to work hard at getting out of this (hell)hole of debt! And as you might have guessed, I can't afford to pay much over minimum without incurring MORE debt, but if paying a little more will help my FICO score, I will definitely do that.
Right now BoA is offering 0% and 3% rates to me. I have 3 cards with them.
Card 1: 0% expiring now, already transferred some to Capital One, need to transfer the rest somewhere else.
Card 2: 0% offer, fairly low limit.
Card 3: 3% offer, also fairly low limit.
And one with Wamu that I need to pay since it is going to 14% with a pretty big balance.


BoA is offering to combine the last two into one so I can get more on the 0% offer, so I wonder how that will affect my FICO score. I am not sure of the details of how they will do that, i.e. will they close one, etc.
But the real question is how much does borrowing near the credit limit hurt my FICO score? Is it a continuous scale, or more of a tier system like the FICO score itself? I have seen 30% and 50% tossed around, but I was thinking more like 90% versus 70%, etc. I figure I CAN'T afford to pay 12-14% on a big balance, so it's better to take the FICO hit now and try to recover it.
On a similar subject, how about payments and FICO score? If making the minimum payment is bad for my FICO score, how much above minimum do I have to pay to fix that? $1? 120% of minimum? 150% 200% Is it a continuous or tier system? And would subscribing to something like Score Watch at myfico.com show that kind of detail? I'm going to watch the demo now and I'll report back with what I find. Actually I guess I just need the detailed calculation algorithm, or a calculator like the nice one Wamu has on their website but maybe a little more detailed. They do have a very nice feature, where it tells you the one thing you can do to raise FICO. It says two things - pay down the debt (duh!) and make more than minimum payments, but of course paying down the debt to limit ratio is not feasible for me now, but making slightly bigger than minimum payments is.
Thank you! And I promise to work hard at getting out of this (hell)hole of debt! And as you might have guessed, I can't afford to pay much over minimum without incurring MORE debt, but if paying a little more will help my FICO score, I will definitely do that.
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