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credit-report-vs-credit-score

Why Do the Credit Scores I Pull Look Different Than the Ones My Lender Pulls?

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Why Do the Credit Scores I Pull Look Different Than the Ones My Lender Pulls?

“Help! I’m really confused! I got all 3 of my credit scores online last week and they looked really good. Today I applied for a mortgage and the scores the lender pulled look totally different. All 3 scores are about 50 points lower than the scores I saw online. Thankfully, my scores were still high enough to get a mortgage loan, but why are the scores so much lower today?”

In the credit world there are few things which frustrate and upset consumers more than discovering the sometimes vast difference between consumer credit scores and the credit scores used by lenders. Popular TV commercials for credit monitoring websites often confuse consumers and lead them to believe that they have only one credit score. However, the truth is that there are actually hundreds of different types of credit scores. The idea that you have one "official" credit scores is a complete myth.

Consumer Scores Vs. Lender Scores

While there are hundreds of credit scores available, most of these scores can be boiled down into one of 2 categories - consumer scores or lender scores. (Insurance companies often use credit based insurance risk scores as well, but for the purpose of this article those scores will fall into the "lender" category as well.) Consumer scores are scores that are accessible to you individually. You can purchase these scores from the credit bureaus directly, from FICO directly, or from a host of consumer credit monitoring websites. Some websites will offer you free credit scores in exchange for signing up for a trial offer of their credit monitoring services. Other websites will offer you a free score from 1 of the 3 major credit bureaus (not all 3) in exchange for your email address and the right to advertise financial services to you. CLICK HERE if you would like to compare websites where you can access your 3 consumer credit scores.

Lender scores are almost always some version of a FICO score. There are some lenders which have begun using VantageScore credit scores (a score created by the credit bureaus themselves) in recent years, but FICO is still the most popular lender score in use today by a landslide. Both FICO and VantageScore have released multiple generations of their credit scoring software. Additionally, FICO scores come in many varieties (FICO Mortgage Score, FICO Auto Score, FICO Personal Finance Score, FICO Installment Loan Score, etc.) and each different FICO score variety typically has different versions in use as well. If today you were to pull a copy of your consumer credit scores, have a mortgage loan officer pull your credit scores, and have an auto lender pull your credit score then you have almost a 100% chance of getting a different set of numbers every time. Credit scores can vary pretty wildly depending upon which credit scoring model is being used to calculate them.

Focus On Healthy Credit

If you are feeling frustrated or overwhelmed as you try to keep track with all of the different possible credit scores, you are not alone. Remember the statement above revealing that you have hundreds of credit scores? It would be practically impossible for a consumer to keep track of each one of these scores individually. Instead of spending time and energy focusing on the numbers, it is much better to focus on the health of your credit as a whole.

The fact of the matter is that all credit scores are based upon the same data. Your credit scores are calculated from the information which is contained in your credit reports. (Don't forget, you can get a copy of all 3 of your credit reports, without scores, completely free once a year at www.annualcreditreport.com.) If your credit reports show that you routinely make late payments on your accounts, your scores will suffer regardless of who pulls them or which credit scoring model is used to calculate them. If you have clean credit reports with no collections, no late payments, and low credit card balances then all of your many scores will likely be in great shape. You may have hundreds of scores, but you only have 3 credit reports. You may not be able to control your credit scores, but you can absolutely control your credit management habits.  


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Michelle Black is an author and a credit expert with nearly 2 decades of experience, the credit blogger at HOPE4USA.com, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, and a regularly featured speaker at seminars on various credit and financial topics. She is an expert on improving credit scores, credit reporting, correcting credit errors, budgeting, and recovering from identity theft.




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Why Consumers Don't Care about Credit

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Why Consumers Don't Care about Credit

As I was checking Google for credit related news this week, something that I do quite often as the admitted credit geek that I am, I came across an article about a new study that really bothered me. The study I am referring to was recently conducted by Bankrate and, among other things, it estimates that around 35% of US consumers have never reviewed their credit reports and over 26% of consumers have never even checked one of their credit scores.

As a credit expert I am constantly approached by consumers who are extremely concerned about their credit and want to learn more about how to improve their credit reports and scores to the highest level possible. So, I found it pretty disturbing that over 1/4 of consumers simply seem not to care about their credit at all.

Although disturbed by the study, I was not surprised by the fact that a large portion of US consumers are unconcerned about their credit reports and scores. After all, thanks to the Fair and Accurate Transactions Act (FACTA) passed in 2003, consumers have had the right to pull copies of all 3 of their credit reports for free annually via AnnualCreditReport.com. Yet only a mere 4% of these free reports are claimed on an annual basis.

There are many different reasons why consumers ignore their credit reports and scores. However, regardless of the reason ignoring your credit is a recipe for disaster - especially with the modern prevalence of data breaches. Here are 3 of the top reasons why consumers do not care about their credit as much as they should.

1. Failure to Understand the Responsibility

Of course you have the right to expect accurate and error-free credit reports. It is a right that is afforded to you under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). Yet even though you have the right to expect accurate credit reports the fact of the matter is that errors and fraud occur on credit reports every single day. Mistakes on credit reports are quite common. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission released a study in 2013 which estimated there to be around 40 million mistakes on consumer credit reports. This means 1 in 5 consumers are victims of credit report errors.

While you do have the right to expect accurate credit, it is 100% up to YOU to monitor your credit reports for mistakes. When and if a mistake does arise then you have the right to dispute the mistake with the credit reporting agencies or even with the creditor or collection agency directly. However, if you are not in the habit of checking your credit reports routinely then you will never know when an problem occurs.

2. Bad Advice

The cash-and-carry crowd has many consumers convinced, especially young consumers, that living a life free from the shackles of credit is the only logical choice to make. However, the belief that credit scores, credit cards, loans, and mortgages are all part of an evil system designed to ensnare the unsuspecting masses is completely false.

Even if you decide to avoid credit cards, rent your home, and pay cash for vehicles it is still impossible to live a life which is unaffected by your credit reports and scores (unless you plan on going completely off the grid and living in a shack in the woods). Like it or not, your credit reports and scores impact many areas of your life including your insurance premiums, utility deposits, your ability to rent an apartment, your ability to rent a car, and even your ability to land a job. The sooner you admit to yourself how much your credit really matters the better off you will be. CLICK HERE to read "Why Credit Avoidance Is a Bad Strategy."

3. Mistaken Beliefs

Many people mistakenly believe the their credit only matters when they apply for a loan. However, only checking your credit reports and scores during a loan application is a giant mistake. First, if credit issues do arise during a loan application it is important to understand that it can often take months of hard work to resolve credit problems on your own or even with professional assistance. Second, only viewing your credit reports during a loan application is dangerous because it increases the probability of fraudulent accounts appearing on your credit reports without your knowledge.

How to Monitor Your Credit

Thankfully, monitoring your credit is not very difficult. You have the right to access a free credit report from each of the 3 credit bureaus individually annually via the website AnnualCreditReport.com. There are also many websites where you can access completely free credit scores (generally from one credit bureau at a time). CLICK HERE for a list of free credit score websites. Finally, you can sign up for an inexpensive, 3-bureau credit monitoring service to make the process of keeping tabs on your credit reports and scores consistently a breeze. CLICK HERE for a list of reputable, 3-bureau credit monitoring services.







michelle-lambright-black-credit-expert

Michelle Black is leading credit expert with over 13 years of experience, the credit blogger at HOPE4USA.com, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, a contributor to the Wealth Section of Fort Mill Magazine, and  a regularly featured speaker at seminars up and down the East Coast. She is an expert on improving credit scores, budgeting, and identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE Facebook page by clicking here. 


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Credit Report vs. Credit Score - What's the Difference?

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Credit Report vs. Credit Score - What's the Difference?

Credit Reports versus Credit Scores

Let’s face it, for most people the world of credit can be a very confusing place. If you can’t explain the difference between a credit report and a credit score, you are not alone. People often use the terms “credit reports” and “credit scores” as if they were interchangeable. However, credit reports and credit scores are two totally different animals. Here is a crash course in credit terminology to help you make sense of this confusing topic and turn you into the super savvy consumer you always wanted to be.

Credit Reports

There is not merely one, but rather three major credit bureaus who compile data from lenders, credit card companies, collection agencies, public records, etc.  The credit bureaus are Equifax, Trans Union, and Experian. The data is compiled into credit files which are then used to generate credit reports (basically user friendly versions of the credit files themselves). In fact, the credit bureaus compile credit data about millions of consumers and sell credit reports to lenders and directly to consumers themselves.

If you have not checked your credit reports in a while, it is a good idea to do so right away. After all, it is ultimately your responsibility to monitor your credit reports for errors and for fraud. You can access a free copy of each of your credit reports (NOT your credit scores) each year at www.annualcreditreport.com. Credit reports do not exist to judge your credit management history, but rather to simply lay out the facts regarding how well you manage your debts.

Credit Scores

Contrary to popular belief, the credit bureaus themselves do not calculate your credit scores. Where a credit report simply lists a record of your credit management history, a credit score actually exists to evaluate and rate that data into an easy to understand number for lenders. A low number indicates that the consumer has a history of poor credit management. A high number indicates the opposite.

The original and most popular credit scoring model by a huge margin is FICO. In 1989 FICO partnered with Equifax to introduce the first credit bureau FICO risk score. The purpose of a FICO credit score is to predict risk – specifically the risk of the consumer going 90 days late on any account within the next 24 months. Today, FICO builds credit scoring software and installs it on the mainframe of each of the 3 major credit bureaus. The credit bureaus will use FICO’s software to calculate their own credit data and then sells the credit reports with credit scores to lenders. FICO receives a royalty from the credit bureaus for the use of the software.

FICO credit scores range from 300 to 850. If a consumer has a low credit score then the data in the consumer’s credit report indicates that there is a high risk involved with loaning money to that consumer. If a consumer has a high credit score then there is a low risk involved with loaning money to that consumer.

As mentioned above, consumers are currently not entitled via federal law to receive free copies of their credit scores annually. (Note: if you apply for a mortgage then mortgage lenders are required by law to show you all 3 of your credit scores that were pulled for the mortgage application.) Still, there are several places online where you can receive free educational credit scores (not the same scores as the ones used by lenders) or a free score from one of the bureaus individually. You can also view your credit scores, often initially for free, as a benefit of signing up for monthly credit monitoring services. Beware, many monitoring services will only all you to see your credit score from one and not all three of the credit bureaus. CLICK HERE to access a great comparison site where you can check out the benefits of several different credit monitoring services before deciding which option is right for you.


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Michelle Black is an 12+ year credit expert with HOPE4USA, the credit blogger at HOPE4USA.com, a recognized credit expert on talk shows and podcasts nationwide, a contributor to the Wealth Section of Fort Mill Magazine, and  a regularly featured speaker at seminars up and down the East Coast. She is an expert on improving credit scores, budgeting, and recovering from identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE Facebook page by clicking here. 


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