1.
HOW IT IS CALCULATED
Those who have not missed a payment score highly. Payments late by 30 days or more hurt your score, and the later you pay, the greater the damage.
HOW TO OPTIMIZE THIS SCORE
Obviously pay off any outstanding debt that is overdue immediately and keep your credit free of any missed payments for a few months. Even if your score has been negatively impacted already, it has the potential to go up a bit once you do this. For some folks the extra points matter in qualifying for some types of mortgages. Longer-term, any account that has a derogatory mark will eventually fall off your credit history in 7-10 years, so at least a mistake in the past won’t follow you around forever.
2.
HOW IT IS CALCULATED
Those who have the least balance of debt (primarily credit card balance) score highly. The scoring companies are trying to determine your default risk with this category. Having less debt makes you a safer borrower. At the end of each of your monthly statements they are going to measure how much you borrow as a percentage of your credit line, a measure mostly relevant on your credit card accounts. The lower you borrow, the higher your credit score will be. There are various thresholds published on what this number should be under, but a monthly balance under 1% of your total credit limit will score the highest for this category.
HOW TO OPTIMIZE THIS SCORE
If you have the financial flexibility, pay down your credit cards in full BEFORE your monthly statement ends. Remember that they measure your utilization based on the numbers from your monthly statement. So set a reminder to do this a few days before your statement closes out each month. This way your utilization ratio on your monthly statement will be 0%, which will lead to a perfect score in this category! Do this for a couple of months while you are searching for your home and then you can go back to your lender when you found your place with a more competitive credit score. You will be surprised how much your score will improve (not uncommon to see a 20 to 30 point increase). If you don’t have the financial flexibility to do this, try to keep the ratio under 6%, or worst cast under 30% (two commonly published figures where the score becomes more negatively affected once you cross them).
Finally another way to reducing your utilization ratio is asking for a credit line of increase. HOWEVER, we do not recommend you do this if you plan to buy in the near term as your provider will likely put a hard inquiry into your credit to determine if you are worthy of an increase, thereby potentially decreasing your credit score in the near term!
3.
HOW IT IS CALCULATED
Those who have not applied for new debt in the past 6-12 months score highly. The scoring companies are trying to determine the risk related to how often you go out to borrow. The more accounts you open recently, particularly within the last 6 to 12 months, the riskier you are deemed to borrowers and your score will be penalized. However it is a catch 22 as without opening new accounts you will never have a good line of credit or credit history down the road! Important to note that in addition to opening new accounts, “hard inquires”, which are when you give a lender permission to access your credit history to determine if you are creditworthy, hurts your score slightly for each inquiry.
HOW TO OPTIMIZE THIS SCORE
If you need to open a new account, we recommend not opening the new account in the same period of when you are applying for a major loan (like a mortgage!). Any new credit you take is going to lower your score so it’s better to open your accounts when you don’t really need a great score. In addition, if you keep the hard inquires to under 2 every six months, it will minimally affect your score. The big takeaway: Do not open any new credit lines while you are in the mortgage process and minimize hard inquires into your credit history.
4.
HOW IT IS CALCULATED
Those with longer standing accounts score highly. The longer your accounts have been around the safer you are deemed as a borrower. Note that they will take an average length of all your accounts to determine this score. The scoring companies do not disclose what constitutes a great score, but it is generally understood if your average length per account is greater than 10 years, then you will score very strongly in this category.
HOW TO OPTIMIZE THIS SCORE
There is a misconception that closing unused accounts is a good thing; unfortunately this is not true, especially if they are older accounts in good standing as taking these accounts out will lower your average account length. It’s worth keeping that unused account open, especially if it doesn’t carry an annual fee. Obviously with new accounts it takes years of having good credit to get a good score in this area so we encourage you to build credit early on and be patient on this one.
5.
HOW IT IS CALCULATED
Those with variety of debt (credit cards, mortgage, student loan, etc.) score highly. The scoring companies believe those with a lot of different types of debt are safer borrowers (which doesn’t make sense to us!). Those with different types of debt like a mortgage, car loan, student loan and credit cards will score highly here.
HOW TO OPTIMIZE THIS SCORE
Bear in mind this is the least important factor of the 5 scores. Over time this factor will likely work itself out for you as most folks will have a mix of debt between their mortgage, car payments, credit cards, personal loans, and other types of installment loans as they progress in their lives. There is no stated rule of how many accounts you should have in total but there is some evidence to show those with 10 or more accounts score well in this area. Obviously don’t open accounts you really don’t need just to maximize this score. Obviously if you go out and get a different type of credit this part of your score will increase but your “New Credit Opened” score will decrease. Our recommendation is to not open new accounts unless you need them, especially when about to apply for a mortgage.