credit report comparison

February 19, 2010

6 Tips for Finding the Right Credit Repair Company

Stuart Hunter asked:


Choosing a credit repair company is a big decision. Choosing the wrong company could cost you hundreds or even thousands of dollars, and if they are not successful, you have delayed your goal of a good credit score by months or even years. And if that wasn’t enough, using a fraudulent credit repair service could even get you in legal trouble.

So to help you through this process and help keep you safe from getting taken advantage of, here is a guide to shopping for a credit repair service. Below are some tips you can use to make sure you end up choosing a legitimate credit repair company to help you work towards achieving your credit goals.

Know how the credit system and credit repair work

Before you even begin searching for a credit repair service, you should know the basics of how the credit reporting system works. After all, you wouldn’t go shopping for a new car if you didn’t know anything about how to drive or how cars operate. So make sure before you begin looking for a credit repair service you understand the basics of how the credit bureaus operate, how your credit reports are created, and how they are used, and why it is your responsibility to ensure their accuracy.

Know what a credit repair company can and cannot do

Despite what some credit repair providers would like you to believe, there are no secret tricks to repairing your credit. Credit repair companies use the same methods to clean up your credit reports that are available to you as a result of the numerous consumer protection statutes enacted to help protect you from being taken advantage of by creditors and the credit bureaus. The only difference is that an experienced credit repair company already has the knowledge and experience necessary to take advantage of these credit repair tools. In comparison, it may take you many hours of research and a few months of practice to figure out how to go about effectively restoring your credit.

Look at the services being provided

A credit repair company is legally able to provide all the same credit repair services you can perform for yourself, but this does not mean that all do. Many credit repair services only provide credit bureau disputes which can be effective for some people, but are typically less successful and take more time than pairing credit bureau disputes with other credit repair tactics.

Look for experience and results

While no credit repair company is perfect and ultimately the success of any credit repair effort is dependent on your creditors and the credit bureaus, an experienced company will likely produce faster and more meaningful results than a relatively new company that is still learning the nuances of the system.

Look at the price tag

The goal is then to get the best value for your dollar. To determine this, take into account what services you will be getting for your money and make a best estimate of the relative quality of these services. This should help you get a feel for how companies compare to each other. For example, if one service charges $49 per month for credit bureau disputes and has been operating for only 2 years, you are probably better off using a competing service for $20 more per month that also provides creditor interventions and has been in business for a decade.

Use your common sense

Just as you would at any other time when someone is asking you to part with your hard earned money, when you are looking at a credit repair service, trust your instincts and remember the old adage of anything that sounds too good to be true, probably is.

You should be completely confident that you are making the right decision. It is your credit that is on the line and your money that is being invested. Don’t let anyone pressure you into something that doesn’t feel right.



Colleen

February 13, 2010

Why Could My Credit Card Application Be Refused?

Jon Francis asked:


Many people have questions when they apply for a credit card – which is the best for me? How do they decide to give me a credit card? Why do they need to know all these things about me? What does it mean to be pre-approved? What could make the card company decide not to give me a credit card?

It’s not all that mysterious a process. Companies make their decisions based on your credit score, which is derived from your credit report and other information that they may have about you. Your credit record is maintained by reporting bureaus – the Big Three are Equifax, Experian and CallCredit. Each maintains a separate credit history, and as a general rule, they don’t share information with each other. Your credit file may contain may details like:

-People on the electoral register at your address

-Details of late payments or defaults on any loans

-CCJs and bankruptcy orders against you

-All your applications for credit

-Other people who share your address

The credit reference agency does no more than supply the information on your credit history. When you apply for a credit card, the company that will issue that card takes your credit report and feeds the information in it into a set of algorithms – mathematical equations – that compare your information with the information about a fictitious ‘ideal customer’. That customer has certain traits – a particular wage, a certain number of credit cards, a particular marital status, own a home or rent one, be living there for a certain number of years. The closer your own traits are to that ideal, the higher your credit rating or score will be. The higher your credit rating, the more credit card companies would be pleased to have you as a customer.

Before you apply, it’s to your benefit to shop around for the best credit card for you. It is NOT to your benefit to just apply willy-nilly to any credit card offer that strikes your fancy. It’s really not true that ‘the worst that can happen is they’ll say no.’ There’s another, not-so-obvious consequence to credit card rejections. You might have noticed that one of the things that appears in your credit report is a list of your applications for credit. If that list is too long, it will be a negative mark in your credit score, making it harder for you to get the credit card you want. That’s why it’s important to shop around before applying – and the best is one that is almost certain to approve your application.

Some reasons your application may be turned down:

-You’ve applied for a card that targets people with higher credit scores.

Most companies that issue credit cards have a variety of them – they call them ‘credit products’ – each aimed at a different market. A reward credit card, for instance, often targets those with the best credit scores. At a credit card comparison site you can check each credit card offer to see if it is aimed at those with excellent, good, fair, poor or bad credit, and apply for the one that best applies to you.

-You don’t have any credit history.

Believe it or not, never having borrowed money before can work against you when you apply for a credit card. If you have no history of having paid bills, then the company has no way of judging whether or not you’ll pay their account.

-You’ve not been in your current job or residence long enough.

One of the pieces of your credit score puzzle is how stable you are, and that’s judged by how long you’ve been in your current residence or position. If it’s less than two years, it will be a negative, even if there’s a good reason for it.

-You’ve applied for too many other credit cards and loans.

This is one reason to be sure you only apply for the best credit card – the one that you’re most likely to be approved for. If you’ve applied for many credit cards in a six to twelve month period, the credit card companies may see it as a sign that you may be in financial trouble.



Rosa

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