Looking to improve my credit score.Ive a older credit card Id like to up the limit on, but am afraid if I request this, they will pull my credit (which is bad).Any one know if they will pull credit or if its even really worth it?
8/14/2012 1:08:20 PM
if you've had the card a while, you can count on them pulling your credit.getting your credit pulled every now and then won't hurt you that much, if at all. doing it frequently is what you want to avoid.
8/14/2012 1:22:55 PM
I would think this would play out 1 of 2 ways:1. Your credit card company ups your credit limit because you pay your bills on time2. Your credit card company does not up your credit limit because you don't pay your bills on time, in which case you really don't have any business upping your credit limit until you can handle the one you have.
8/14/2012 1:28:10 PM
Yes your credit will be pulled when you request a limit increase. Yes, it will slightly lower your score, but only temporarily. Inquires are normal and you can't go through life without them, you just try to limit them (don't go stupid applying for cards/services constantly).I'm not sure how it works for credit limit increases/new cards, but the way I understand some inquires to work, is that some inquires, within a certain time frame, only count as 1 inquiry against you (mortgages or car loans, for example).
8/14/2012 1:33:29 PM
Some credit pulls for limit increases are hard, some are soft. Soft pulls won't affect your score.
8/14/2012 1:41:58 PM
^Do you know how/why that varies? According to what Citi and Chase reps told me, any pull from them per your request is a hard pull (of course, the reps could just be idiots).I guess if the bank decides to pre-approve you or increase your limit with no request, then those would be soft pulls?[Edited on August 14, 2012 at 1:48 PM. Reason : .]
8/14/2012 1:47:46 PM
http://www.creditkarma.comI've read that the credit scores are on the conservative side but I've never paid for a real credit score to know any better. There is a simulator that will let you do exactly what you want to though (increase limit; add 1 inquiry) and give you a estimate of how much your score changes.
8/14/2012 1:56:08 PM
Are you looking to improve your credit for the sole purpose of upping the limit of your existing card, because if you already have good credit then I'd just get a new card. Capital One was being a bitch and even after I graduated they refused to raise the limit past $1500. However if your credit sucks, you'll just need to keep paying your bills on time, not taking out any crazy loans, and not using >30% of your available credit.
8/14/2012 2:07:23 PM
8/14/2012 2:08:14 PM
i would go read up on myfico forums. i've bumped up about 80 points in 8 mons by just writing a couple letters, getting a credit card etc. btw all 3 of my scores are within 5 point of the credit karma score.[Edited on August 14, 2012 at 2:39 PM. Reason : credit karma is cool]
8/14/2012 2:21:30 PM
inquiries last 2 years on record. Trust me ive been doing the research.
8/14/2012 4:19:27 PM
Inquiries remain in your credit report for 2 years (24 months). The good news is that they can only hurt your credit scores for the first 12 months. After 12 months, they don't impact your credit scores at all.
8/14/2012 4:56:00 PM
If the card is thru Bank of America and homeskillet has had a late payment or two, they'll close the card. That shit happened to me.
8/14/2012 6:27:28 PM
I recently asked American Express to up my credit limit from $1000 to $3500. They did it without running my credit.
8/14/2012 6:38:32 PM
8/14/2012 6:40:16 PM
8/14/2012 8:16:18 PM
Oh this will be good. Go ahead GxB, I'm eagerly waiting to read your next few posts
8/14/2012 9:34:22 PM
I like credit karma but they don't include any loans I've had with SECU. This currently includes an auto loan and my mortgage. I expect that because of this they overestimate my score.
8/14/2012 10:03:37 PM
Do not use credit cards. They in conjunction with the consumer culture you are forced to live in by accident of birth are carefully designed to exploit your psychological weaknesses (greed, need for acceptance) for the purpose of stealing your money.Save your money and use it sparingly and wisely. Each dollar you spend is a little vote for what you think is important in life and how you think people should treat each other.Anything worth going into debt for (house, education, sex) can either be had for free or at a very much lower interest rate from specialized government secured lenders.Oh and consumerism is an addiction, you can't wean yourself from it with some Americunt hanging off of you.Don't go too far and be a dirty hippie either, let me give you some guidelines:Don't have a car if you can honestly get by with a bicycle (yes, this means rent close to work next time you move to a new place)Eat good quality food produced sustainably (yes it costs you more and it's less satisfying until you get used to it)You don't need fancy new stuff (good people don't think any more of you for it)For vacations, go to state parks instead of commercial destinations.In general try not to buy anything that depreciates in value.
8/14/2012 10:44:03 PM
Pay your debt you mustI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
8/14/2012 10:51:03 PM
David0603 Where areyou basing your info off of?Im doing this for looking to buy a house.
8/14/2012 11:03:01 PM
8/14/2012 11:08:48 PM
Credit.com. I can get you a direct link when not on my phone. Only booting up the laptop if GxB responds.
8/14/2012 11:10:27 PM
8/14/2012 11:41:09 PM
8/15/2012 7:37:01 AM
^^ Wow, it's impressive that you can't fit that much stupid into one post.If you can get a mortgage payment that is equivalent to rent paid and you intend to stay in a place long enough to build any equity at all you should do it.30 year mortgages are for suckers, IMO, but it varies by financial situation. My personal feeling is that you should go no longer than a 20 year mortgage, less if possible. I don't own a home at this point, but when I do I will get a 15 year mortgage.If you have any sense you won't pay more than 30-40% of your take home pay for housing, either mortgage or rent. What's impressive is that jcgolden actually managed to post stuff nearly as dumb. This is a real gem:
8/15/2012 9:19:08 AM
http://www.credit.com/answers/questions/39/How-long-does-an-inquiry-stay-on-my-credit-reportI honestly think jc is just trying to one up gb. The stupidity of their posts makes my head hurt.
8/15/2012 9:29:33 AM
:embed renaissance fair vid:
8/15/2012 3:20:49 PM
Does anyone else have a large number of student loans on your credit report due to loans being sold/transferred, etc resulting in a ton of installment loans on your report?This seems to have a very adverse effect on overall credit score. I ran my wife's credit and there wasn't a single ding, but noticed 13 installment loans from her 4 actual loans being sold and transferred over time.
8/15/2012 5:14:24 PM
8/15/2012 6:44:38 PM
fwiw: http://www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/help/5-parts-components-fico-credit-score-6000.phpUpping the credit limit should you receive it outweighs the costs of a hard inquiry...As an aside: This also means that if you are by any chance getting the pre-approval letters from someone like chase with their freedom card for a good sized credit limit, taking on new credit will have minimal affect on your score -- it would probably stay roughly the same by the time your average credit history length shortens and you receive a new hard inquiry, yet your utilization decreases and overall credit limit increase.If you want a quick boost to your credit cards, pay them off in full such that you drop your utilization below 10%. This means if your limit is $1000 (of all your cards) current payment in full is $300 (assuming of all your cards), yet your balance is $700 (of all your cards)... Pay a payment of $600 so your next statement comes in at $100. Yes it is a pain and defies the time value of money logic that tells you to pay $300 now and $400 next payment.DO NOT pay your cards down to $0. They then get ~"excluded" from credit score calculations. It is better to have a couple 7/11 items on all your cards than to have a card that sits and is never used.
8/15/2012 7:22:07 PM
^what's your credit score?
8/15/2012 7:54:14 PM
my credit score is pretty goddamn good and i have a bunch of rewards cards i always pay in full.the only other debt i have is student loans, car, and a house i recently bought.score = 830 as of last month.*shrug*
8/15/2012 8:04:53 PM
I don't even know my credit card score.I used to get it free with Providian but they got bought out by WaMu and WaMu stopped it. At the time, it was 790 out of 850 without even trying. I don't fuck with sites that claim to show you your credit score because they are all scams to me. If freecreditreport.com can afford commercials, it means they are making profit off me wanting to see my credit report. I haven't found a free site that's trustworthy.
8/15/2012 8:14:50 PM
8/15/2012 10:01:26 PM
If I offered you a 3% discount for using cash at the register, would you pay with cash?
8/15/2012 11:10:37 PM
Sure, unless I'm at a restaurant or getting gas, since I get 5% on that.
8/15/2012 11:28:18 PM
Good to know. I'll just raise my prices by 5.5% come January and offer a 5.5% discount for using cash.
8/16/2012 3:17:02 AM
not that anyone who cares would come into your sleepy little place, but if Visa finds out, they aint gonna be happy.
8/16/2012 3:44:41 AM
They shouldn't be happy. I'm taking their money from them.Or am I keeping my own money?[Edited on August 16, 2012 at 3:47 AM. Reason : .]
8/16/2012 3:47:07 AM
8/16/2012 4:47:11 AM
Gas stations in New York have a cash price per gallon and a credit price per gallon. The credit price is normally 15 to 20 cents higher.
8/16/2012 8:12:55 AM
We need a GxB and JcG free thread. Or TWW.
8/16/2012 8:23:55 AM
^^There are gas stations in NC that advertise 2 different prices (there's one near my house that advertises this way). You will also find some gas stations offer the discount if you go inside and ask and don't even advertise it. I think the rule is they can't charge more than advertised if you use a credit card, but they can pass on savings to cash customers but I could be wrong.[Edited on August 16, 2012 at 8:41 AM. Reason : ]
8/16/2012 8:39:31 AM
I don't know if recent legislation changed all of the rules, but it used to be that stores could advertise a cash discount; I don't think that's changed. (There couldn't be a minimum for CCs, a fee, surcharge, or any type of penalty; it had to be advertised as a cash discount).
8/16/2012 8:45:53 AM
8/16/2012 10:35:00 AM
Debit cards are pretty dangerous. I do not suggest using them to pay for any sketchy transactions like gas on a roadtrip. Card Skimmers are out there.Debit cards transfer money directly out of your bank account, and unless you buy special fraud insurance, once your money is spent by the thief, it's gone forever.Someone can wipe out your entire account in less time than it takes for you to get home.Credit cards are safer because when you use them, you are using someone else's money. When the credit card companies money is involved, the credit card companies have a right to "charge back" their money at the expense of the business. A business has 45 days to dispute the claim but it's a pain in the butt and business almost always loses.
8/16/2012 2:13:28 PM
That's the most coherent and intelligent post you've ever had. On top of that it's pretty much factually correct, too! The incorrect part is saying that your money is certainly lost and one is SOL. That is NOT the case; it can be, but is not always. You can still dispute the charge; in fact (anecdotal evidence warning) I've always "won" disputes on my debit card.I applaud you and award 15 internet points.[Edited on August 16, 2012 at 2:17 PM. Reason : .]
8/16/2012 2:16:42 PM
8/16/2012 2:25:51 PM
8/16/2012 2:38:43 PM