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Why Your Credit Card Doesn't Show the Current Balance On Your Credit Reports

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Why Your Credit Card Doesn't Show the Current Balance On Your Credit Reports

Do you check your credit reports and scores often, perhaps even monthly? If so, kudos to you on developing a wonderful and wise habit, one which has the potential to really pay off in the future. One of the best ways to achieve and maintain great credit is to monitor your reports and scores closely.

If you do check your credit often then you have probably also become aware of a rather frustrating and puzzling fact when it comes to how your credit card balances appear on your credit reports. Unfortunately, the current balance on your credit card account will generally not line up exactly with the balance which is reflected on your credit reports. Believe it or not, while these mismatched balances can certainly be frustrating, these discrepancies are probably not due to a credit reporting error.

Say Cheese

The balances which are reported by your card issuers to the credit bureaus do not actually represent the real-time activity which takes place on your accounts. In other words, your credit reports will not show an updated balance every time you make a new charge or even when you make a payment. Instead, credit reporting works quite a bit differently.

Your card issuer will actually update the information on your credit reports just once a month. This update occurs shortly after your statement closing date when your card issuer will send a snapshot of your balance and payment information as it is currently reflected on your account at that moment. That snapshot of your balance and other account activity will remain on your credit reports until the information is replaced with a new snapshot the following month.

What Is the Statement Closing Date?

The statement closing date on your credit card account is the date when your bill for the previous month is closed out. It signals the end of your current billing cycle and is also the day when your payment due date is set. Generally the due date will be scheduled for around 25 days after the statement closing date, depending upon your card issuer's policies. If you make any charges after your statement closing date those new charges will be added to the following monthly statement.

It is important to find out your statement closing date from your credit card issuer since this date (or very soon thereafter) is when your balance will be updated with the credit bureaus. Whatever your balance is on your statement closing date (or very soon thereafter) it will remain as such on your credit reports for the next month.

A Zero Balance On Your Credit Reports

Your revolving utilization (aka credit utilization) is a big deal when it comes to your credit scores. Credit scoring models are designed to reward consumers who have zero balances on their credit card accounts. However, even if you pay off your credit cards in full each month (kudos again on a great habit) your credit scores might not be benefiting from that commitment and discipline. 

Here is an example to demonstrate why simply paying your credit card accounts off in full each month may not be enough to earn the great credit scores you desire.

·        Total Credit Card Balance on Statement Closing Date (5th of the Month): $1,500

·        Credit Utilization on Statement Closing Date (5th of the Month): 75% ($1,500 Balance/$2,000 Limit = 75% Utilization Ratio)

·        Date Balance and Utilization Reported to 3 Credit Bureaus: 6th of the Month

·        Date Current Balance Paid In Full: 30th of the Month (Due Date)

·        Balance to Appear on Credit Reports Until 6th of the Following Month: $1,500 (75% Utilized)

In the example above even though the credit card balance was ultimately paid in full on the due date and, therefore, no interest fees were owed, the balance which would show up on the consumer's credit reports would be the one which was accurate on the statement closing date ($1,500 in this case). Since that balance leaves the cardholder heavily utilized (75%), there would almost certainly be a negative impact upon the cardholder's credit scores as a result, even though no late payments were made and even though the balance was actually paid in full by the due date. If the card holder continued to utilize the card and pay it off on the due date each month then this credit-score-damaging cycle would continue to repeat over and over again.

A Better Way to Pay

The good news is that your statement closing date is not a secret and by paying off your balance in full a few days prior to that date your card issuer should report a $0 balance to the credit bureaus on your account. You can typically find your statement closing date on your credit card statement or you can give the card issuer's customer service department a call for this information as well. Once you find out your statement closing date you will simply need to rearrange the date when you pay off your credit card balance each month.

By paying off your credit card balance each month a few days prior to your statement closing date your balance will actually be $0 when your monthly statement is released. As a result, the balance on your credit reports for the following month should be reported as $0 as well.  This wise practice will not only help to save you money which might otherwise be wasted in interest charges, but you will also be setting yourself up for a credit score triumph as well.

 







michelle-black-credit-expert

Michelle Black is an author and leading credit expert with nearly a decade and a half of experience, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, and a regularly featured speaker at seminars across the country. She is an expert on improving credit scores, budgeting, and identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE4USA Facebook page by clicking here.


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What Is Revolving Utilization and Why Is It So Important to Your Credit Scores?

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What Is Revolving Utilization and Why Is It So Important to Your Credit Scores?

If you want to have great credit scores then pay your bills on time every month. The previous statement is great advice; however, it is incomplete. Simply paying your bills on time is not enough to achieve and maintain great credit scores. In fact, only 35% of your FICO credit scores are based upon your payment history. The other 65% of your FICO scores have nothing at all to do with how timely you pay your bills.

30% of your FICO credit scores, plus a significant portion of your VantageScore credit scores, are calculated based upon the "Amounts Owed" category of your credit reports. The primary factors considered within the category are based upon those little pieces of plastic you carry around in your wallet: your credit cards.

What Is Revolving Utilization?

Revolving utilization is a term used within the credit world to describe the proportion of your credit card balances to your credit card limits. Your revolving utilization ratio is also known as your debt-to-limit ratio or your credit utilization ratio. It measures how much of your credit limits are in use on each of your credit card accounts and expresses that calculation as a percentage. Here is a quick look at how revolving utilization is calculated.

Credit Limit: $5,000
Balance: $3,500
Revolving Utilization: Balance ($3,500) Divided by Limit ($5,000) = Revolving Utilization (70%)

Why Is Revolving Utilization Considered in Your Credit Scores?

Your revolving utilization is an important consideration in your credit scores for one very simple and important reason: it is statistically predictive of higher credit risk. When you carry outstanding credit card debt on your credit reports you represent a higher credit risk than someone whose reports show paid off credit card balances.

All debt is not created equal. When you take out a mortgage loan or an auto loan, for example, you are opening an installment account. Credit cards, by comparison, are revolving accounts. Installment debt is much less risky for lenders to extend because the debt is generally secured by some sort of collateral (aka your house or your vehicle) which the lender can seize and resell in the event you stop making your payments. However, credit card debt is different.

Because of the nature of credit card debt, it is much more predictive of increased credit risk than installment debt. Think about it. If you begin to struggle financially due to an illness, divorce, job loss, or even poor financial management habits like overspending, which is the first obligation you will probably allow to slide in the event that you have more bills than money at the end of the month? Most likely you will not skip your mortgage payment, your rent, or your auto loan payment if you can help it. Credit card payments, however, are much more commonly skipped in the event of a financial shortage.

Additionally, increased credit card balances might indicate that a financial problem is looming. If a consumer loses his job then it is very common to rely upon credit cards to help finance every day expenses until a new source of income can be secured. As you can easily see, if your reports show that you are revolving balances on your credit cards from month to month, especially high balances when compared with your credit limits, it might make you appear to be a higher credit risk in the eyes of a lender.

The Good News

Although revolving unpaid credit card debt on your credit reports from month to month will almost certainly lower your credit scores, you can currently regain those lost points rather quickly, as soon as you start to eliminate the debt. The other goods news is that the score increase you may be eligible to earn from paying down your credit card balances and lowering your credit utilization can be earned incrementally (instead of an "all or nothing" scenario). In other words, as you pay down your credit card balances little by little you should begin to experience small credit score increases. You do not have to pay a credit card balance all the way down to zero on your credit reports before you can hope to receive a score boost.

 





michelle-black-credit-expert

Michelle Black is an author and leading credit expert with nearly a decade and a half of experience, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, and a regularly featured speaker at seminars across the country. She is an expert on improving credit scores, budgeting, and identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE4USA Facebook page by clicking here.


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How Credit Scoring Actually, Really, Truly Works

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How Credit Scoring Actually, Really, Truly Works

Credit scoring is a complex process, a process driven by secretive software systems that are designed to evaluate the information contained in your credit reports and assign your credit scores based upon that data. If the information on your credit reports shows that you pose a higher risk to lenders then a credit scoring model will assign you lower credit scores. It probably will not come as a shock to you that higher credit scores can benefit you tremendously while lower credit scores can ultimately cost you a lot of money and cause a lot of unnecessary stress.

The unfortunate truth is that if you consistently struggle with poor credit scores then you could easily pay hundreds of thousands of extra dollars in interest over the course of your lifetime for your mortgages, auto loans, credit cards, and personal loans. For this reason, among others, it is a wise idea to learn everything you can about how credit scores are calculated and then use that knowledge to earn the best credit scores possible for yourself.

Credit Scoring by Category

Your FICO credit scores, the scores which are most commonly used by lenders, can potentially range from a low of 300 points to a high of 850 points. Altogether that means that you have up to 550 points up for grabs whenever a FICO scoring model calculates your credit scores. These 550 potential points are broken down into 5 separate scoring categories.

1.      Payment History - 35% (or up to 192 available points)

2.      Amounts Owed - 30% (or up to 165 available points)

3.      Credit History - 15% (or up to 82 available points)

4.      Mix of Credit - 10% (or up to 55 available points)

5.      New Credit - 10% (or up to 55 available points)

*The points above are given for example purposes and are not exact.

For more information about these 5 credit scoring categories check out our previous article, Where Do Your Credit Scores Come From?

How You Earn Credit Score Points

Most consumers have a completely inaccurate view of how credit scoring works. For example, one of the most common questions I receive as a credit expert goes along the lines of "Michelle, how many points will "X" lower my credit scores?" or "How many points will I lose because of "X" action?" However, the idea that any action or item on your credit reports will lower your credit scores is actually incorrect due to the fact that credit scores are always built from the bottom up.

When analyzing the data on your credit reports credit scoring models like FICO will ask a series of questions (aka characteristics) about your credit report and the answers to these questions (aka variables) will ultimately determine the credit score you are assigned. Here is a hypothetical look at how the process works in reality:

The Question (aka Characteristic)
What is the age of the oldest account on the credit report?
The Answer (aka Variable)

·        Less than 1 year old: 40 available points

·        1-2 years old: 50 available points

·        3-5 years old: 60 available points

·        5-10 years old: 70 available points

·        Greater than 10 years old: 82 available points

*Hypothetical variables and point values were used in the scoring sample above.

There are quite a few other factors considered within the "Credit History" category of your credit reports as well, so the example above is really an oversimplification. However, it does serve to give you a better idea of how the credit scoring calculation process operates.  

This question (characteristic) and answer (variable) exercise is repeated over and over again by the credit scoring model until all of the factors considered from your credit report have been completely analyzed. Next the points you earned above (based upon the variable which applied to your credit report) would be added to the points earned from the other credit categories and finally totaled together to come up with your overall credit score.

·        Payment History Category = 150 points earned

·        Amounts Owed Category = 120 points earned

·        Credit History Category = 60 points earned

·        Mix of Credit Category  = 30 points earned

·        New Credit Category = 40 points earned

·        Overall Credit Score = 700 (Remember, your scores begin at 300, not 0)

The Story Continues - Scorecards

Now that you have seen a hypothetical example of how a FICO credit score might be calculated, it is time to complicate the story even more. Credit scoring models also have another component known as "Scorecards." Scorecards make up the framework or skeleton of any scoring model. They separate consumers into like or homogenous groups and each group is scored a little bit differently than the other. Therefore, if your credit reports are being scored by a scorecard designed for consumers who have filed bankruptcy you would not be eligible to earn as many points in each category as you would be eligible to earn if your reports were being scored by a scorecard designed for consumers with no derogatory information (aka clean files). For more information about scorecards, click here.    

Feeling Overwhelmed?

As mentioned above, credit scoring truly is a very complex process. However, what is simple to understand is that credit scores are generated solely based upon the information contained within your credit reports. Therefore, if you maintain credit reports which are free from negative information, keep your payments on time, and keep your credit card balances paid off monthly then you will be well on your way to credit score success. Understanding how credit scoring works is important, but as long as you focus on developing healthy credit management habits you can achieve and maintain the good credit rating you desire.   

Need help overcoming past credit problems? CLICK HERE to schedule a professional credit analysis with a HOPE4USA credit expert today.








michelle-black-credit-expert

Michelle Black is an author and leading credit expert with nearly a decade and a half of experience, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, and a regularly featured speaker at seminars across the country. She is an expert on improving credit scores, budgeting, and identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE4USA Facebook page by clicking here. 


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