Viewing entries tagged
mortgage-scores

Preparing Your Credit for a New Mortgage

Comment

Preparing Your Credit for a New Mortgage

So you are ready to take the plunge and apply for a new mortgage loan this year? Great! Congratulations on making the decision to become a homeowner. With low interest rates, tax advantages, and a host of other benefits that come along with purchasing a home, you have about a million reasons to break free from the shackles of renting.

You can set yourself up for success during your entire home buying experience by knowing what to expect ahead of time. Most importantly, you should be sure that your credit is in tip top shape so that you can qualify for the most attractive rates and terms available on your new mortgage. Check out these 5 steps to help you get started.

1. Check Your Credit

There’s nothing worse than filing out a mortgage application only to find that some unwanted “surprises” have shown up on your credit reports. Unfortunately, this is a very common problem. However it doesn’t have to be since you can access your own credit scores and reports online 24/7. Plus, contrary to a popular credit myth, checking your own credit does NOT harm your credit scores whatsoever.

CLICK HERE for a list of great resources where you can access your 3-bureau credit reports and scores. Finding out exactly what is on your credit reports prior to your loan application should definitely be the first item on your “to do” list during the home buying process.

2. Dealing with Surprises

If your credit reports were all 3 squeaky clean when you checked them in step 1, then skip down to step 3. However, if you found errors or blemishes on your credit reports then you may have some work to do before applying for a mortgage.  Remember, you have the right to dispute inaccurate and unverifiable accounts with the credit bureaus. You can dispute accounts on your own, but you also have the right to work with a professional if you are too busy or feel overwhelmed by the process. CLICK HERE to schedule a no-obligation credit analysis to develop a professional plan to help you work toward cleaner credit reports.

3. Optimize Your Scores

Even if you have no errors or derogatory items on your credit reports (i.e. collection accounts, charge-offs, tax liens, judgments, etc.), it may still be possible for you to improve your credit scores. Take a long hard look at your credit card balances. Paying your credit cards down to $0 can potentially have a very BIG impact upon your scores. (CLICK HERE to read “The Perfect Credit Card Balance.”)

Can’t afford to pay off all of your credit cards? You still have options. Paying down even a few of your cards to zero might still be beneficial to your credit scores. Plus, you can always consider a debt consolidation loan to transform that score-lowering, revolving credit card debt into much more credit score friendly debt – an installment loan.

4. Avoid Mistakes!

When preparing to apply for a mortgage, you need to be a credit boy scout. You don’t want to make any credit mistakes which could result in lower credit scores and a loan denial. Some of the most common mistakes you will want to avoid include making late payments on existing accounts, charging up your credit card balances, opening new accounts (that new car loan needs to wait!), and having your credit reports pulled excessively by lenders.

5. Monitor Your Credit Reports and Scores

There is no better time to keep a close eye on your credit scores than while you are preparing to apply for a mortgage. However, with so many credit monitoring options available, it can be difficult to choose. Keep in mind that a credit monitoring service which allows you to keep an eye on just one credit bureau and one credit score is not going to be enough. After all, when you apply for your mortgage the lender is going to take a look at all 3 of your credit scores and all 3 of your credit reports – Equifax, Trans Union, and Experian. CLICK HERE for a list of several different 3-bureau, 3 score credit monitoring services to see which one is the best fit for you.

Buying a new home is an incredible and exciting experience. However, credit problems during the mortgage application process can often turn what could be a wonderful experience into a nightmare. Follow these 5 steps above and set yourself up for mortgage success. It can be tempting to take shortcuts, but putting in the work on your credit ahead of time will pay off every time.


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, 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. You can connect with Michelle on the HOPE4USA Facebook page by clicking here.



Trending Articles

Comment

Why You Shouldn't Be Too Excited about the New FICO 9 Scoring System...Yet

Comment

Why You Shouldn't Be Too Excited about the New FICO 9 Scoring System...Yet

Last week, on August 7th to be precise, a highly anticipated announcement was made regarding the upcoming release of the new FICO 9 credit scoring system. FICO Score 9 will become commercially available in the fall of 2014 and will feature some pretty radical and exciting changes in the way that the scoring system calculates consumers' credit scores. The new scoring system features 12 scoring models which will be installed on the mainframes of the 3 major credit reporting agencies - Equifax, Trans Union, and Experian.

The Good News

In Fair Isaac Corporation's press release regarding FICO Score 9 it was revealed that there will be 2 major changes in the way the new credit score system treats certain types of collection accounts. First, paid collections will be ignored and bypassed. The bypassing of paid collections is a departure from previous versions of FICO scoring models which are currently in use by lenders today.

Under previous versions of FICO, paying or settling a collection account usually has no positive impact upon a consumer's credit scores whatsoever. The design objective of FICO scores, in other words what FICO scores are created to do,  is to predict the likelihood that a consumer will become 90 days past due on any account within the next 24 months. The reason that paying collections typically does nothing to help a consumer's FICO scores is due to the fact that current versions of FICO are built to be concerned with the fact that a collection account occurred in the first place. Whether a collection account has a $0 balance or a balance greater than $0, the negative score impact is likely the same. Bypassing paid collection accounts by FICO Score 9 will be a major change could cause credit score increases for many consumers.

The second major change being introduced with FICO Score 9 is how the scoring system treats medical collection accounts. Under previous versions of FICO, medical collections were just as damaging to a consumer's credit scores as non-medical collections. However, according to Fair Isaac Corporation, FICO Score  9 "...will help ensure that medical collections have a lower impact on the score." In fact, consumers whose only derogatory accounts are medical collections could expect to see a credit score increase of around 25 points.

Why You Shouldn't Be Too Excited Yet

FICO Score 9, scheduled to become commercially available in the fall of 2014, promises some changes which consumers and loan officers are excited to see. Unfortunately, the new scoring model will likely not be adopted by lenders for a very long time.

It is timely and expensive for lenders to upgrade to a new credit scoring model. Lenders do not change credit scoring models because a new one becomes commercially available either. It's not like lenders will line up around the block to purchase the new FICO Score 9 as if it were the hottest new smart phone release from Apple. Instead, lenders make a change because their own extensive research proves that the newer scoring model is more effective at accurately predicting risk than the previous version they have been using. Even then the change is likely to be slow because, after all, their current scoring model isn't broken, it just is less effective.

The previous version of FICO to be released, FICO 8, is only now being used by a majority of lenders. FICO 8 was released in 2009. In the mortgage industry where the credit scoring version choice is controlled by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the version released prior to FICO 8 is still in use. It will likely be a very, very long time before the new FICO 9 Score is ever seen on a Residential Mortgage Credit Report (RMCR).

Additionally, there is no guarantee that the new FICO 9 Score will be adopted by lenders at all. Yes, FICO has been the undisputed leader in the credit scoring market for decades and they likely will remain the leader in the future. However, FICO is not without competition. VantageScore is the credit scoring product offered by the credit reporting agencies - Equifax, Trans Union, and Experian. While the vast majority of lenders continue to use FICO credit scoring models to calculate risk, VantageScore has been gaining ground little by little since its unveiling in 2006. 


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. 





Trending Articles

Comment