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Will Checking Credit Hurt Your Credit Scores?

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Will Checking Credit Hurt Your Credit Scores?

There are dozens, possibly even hundreds of credit related myths floating regarding the subject of credit scores. As a credit expert I spend a large portion of my time debunking these myths and educating consumers, Realtors, and even loan officers about the real impact which various actions will have upon a person's credit scores. Out of the many, many myths I encounter on a weekly basis one of the most frustrating credit misconceptions that I hear repeated is the idea that checking your own credit will harm your credit scores.

Let's set the record straight right from the beginning. There is a 0% chance that the action of pulling your own personal credit reports for review purposes will damage or hurt your credit scores in any way, shape, or form. In fact, you could even check your own credit reports 100 times per day if you desired and doing so would not have any negative impact upon your credit scores whatsoever. The reason this particular myth is so frustrating is because it deters many consumers from doing the very thing - checking their credit - which they should be doing on a regular basis.

What Are Inquiries?

Whenever you or anyone else pulls a copy of one of your credit reports a record of the credit pull is placed on the report. This record is known as an inquiry. Inquiries are placed upon your credit for multiple reasons, but perhaps the most important reason is so that you as a consumer can know who has had access to your credit. (Credit Tip: keeping an eye on who has accessed your credit reports can be an effective tool to help you monitor for potential identity theft.)

Hard Vs. Soft Inquiries

Inquiries which do not have any impact upon your credit scores, such as those which occur when you pull your own credit reports and those which occur when a creditor prescreens your credit before sending you a credit card offer, are known as soft inquiries. Not only do soft inquiries have no impact upon your credit scores, but they are also only visible to you when you pull a copy of your consumer credit report. If a lender pulls a copy of your credit report no soft inquiries will appear on it.

Hard inquiries are those which do have the potential to damage your credit scores. A hard inquiry can occur when, for example, a credit card issuer pulls a copy of your credit reports to review as part of an account application. Of course, not all hard inquiries will damage your credit scores - that is a myth as well - but they do at least have the potential to do so. (To learn more about how hard inquiries are calculated into your credit scores you can read "How Many Points Will an Inquiry Lower My Credit Scores?")

Why You Should Check Your Credit

Now that you know it is safe to check your own credit reports it is important to understand why you should check your credit reports. Credit report errors occur much more often than most consumers realize. In fact, the FTC released a study in 2013 which estimated there to be around 40 million errors on the credit reports of US consumers at the time.

Of course you have the right to expect accurate credit reports. You are even entitled to accurate credit reports under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Yet, it is ultimately up to you and you alone to monitor your credit and to ensure that errors do not occur. When errors do occur then you have the right to dispute them - either on your own or with the help of a reputable professional.

Thankfully, you also have the right to access a free copy of each of your 3 credit reports every year at AnnualCreditReport.com. There are also many credit monitoring sites which all you the ability to view all 3 of your reports and your credit scores together conveniently. Here is a link to some of my favorites: CLICK HERE.





credit-expert-michelle-lambright-black

Michelle Black is an author and 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, 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 HOPE4USA Facebook page by clicking here. 



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How Many Points Will An Inquiry Lower My Credit Scores?

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How Many Points Will An Inquiry Lower My Credit Scores?

The fact that inquiries have the potential to lower consumer credit scores is not breaking news. Credit savvy consumers know that letting too many lenders pull their credit reports in a short period of time is a bad idea (with the exception of rate shopping for a mortgage, auto loan, or student loan within a 45 day period). However, the idea that inquiries lower your credit scores a particular number of points is a complete myth.

There is nothing on a consumer's credit report that raises or lowers your scores a fixed number of points. For example, an inquiry does not always lower your score 4 points (or 3, 5, or 6 points for that matter). An on-time payment does not raise your credit score 5 points. A late payment does not lower your scores 30 points. That is simply not the way that credit scores work.

How Inquiries Actually Impact Your Credit Scores

Remember, not all inquiries will have a negative impact upon your credit scores. (CLICK HERE to read The Difference Between Hard and Soft Inquiries for more information.) However, as mentioned above, those hard inquiries which do have the potential to negatively impact your credit scores are not going to lower those scores a specific number of points per inquiry that occurs.

Instead, imagine a set of 5 buckets lined up side by side. Each bucket bears a sign which represents the number of inquiries which appear on a consumer's credit report over a period of the past 12 months.

  •  Bucket #1 = 0 Inquiries
  • Bucket #2 = 1-2 Inquiries
  • Bucket #3 = 3-4 Inquiries
  • Bucket #4 = 5-6 Inquiries
  • Bucket #5 = More than 6 Inquiries
    *NOTE: These are hypothetical categories for demonstration purposes only.

Since inquiries are the primary factor which accounts for 10% of your FICO credit scores and the range of FICO scores is 300 - 850 (550 total available points) then there could be the potential for a consumer to earn up to 55 points for her credit scores in the inquiry category. Here's a hypothetical look at how credit score points might be awarded within the inquiry category of a consumer's credit report.

  • Bucket #1 = 0 Inquiries = 55 points
  •  Bucket #2 = 1-2 Inquiries = 45 points
  • Bucket #3 = 3-4 Inquiries = 35 points
  • Bucket #4 = 5-6 Inquiries = 20 points
  • Bucket #5 = More than 6 Inquiries = 10 points
    *NOTE: These are hypothetical categories and points for demonstration purposes only.

While the points listed above are not an exact representation of how many points a consumer's credit score would receive based upon her number of inquiries, the concept is an accurate representation of how credit scores are calculated within a category. In the example above if Jane Doe had a credit report with 3 inquiries then she would receive 35 points (of the 55 available points within the category) to be added to her overall credit score. However, if Jane Doe had no additional credit inquiries and the 3 inquiries became over 12 months old then she would move to the "0 inquiry" bucket and would receive 55 points instead of the 35 points she had received previously. In the case of this example Jane's credit score would increase by 15 points once the 3 previous inquiries aged out of credit score calculation range and she moved to the "0 inquiry" bucket.

When it comes to inquiries just remember that the fewer hard inquiries the better it is for your credit scores. (Soft inquiries which typically occur when you check your own credit are fine. They never lower your scores.) Additionally, as you can see from the "buckets" example above, no single inquiry is worth a particular number of points. Now that you understand that individual credit inquiries are not worth a particular number of points, congratulations! You now understand more about your credit scores than probably 99% of the population.


michelle-black-credit-expert

Michelle Black is an author and a credit expert with over a decade 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, credit reporting, correcting credit errors, budgeting, and recovering from identity theft. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE Facebook page by clicking here. 







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