Technically, no. The Canadian credit bureau does not share information with the US credit bureaus. However, a Canadian creditor can certainly check with a US credit bureau to check your credit history.
Yes, it fits in the "Poor score" category. See link: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/credit-score-rating-scale.html
425 is a bad credit score.
When a Canadian moves to the U.S. their credit history in Canada is irrelevant. They will have no credit in the U.S. though, which can be worse than having bad credit. hi
If you move from Canada to the US and have bad debt in Canada will it effect your credit in the US?
583-619 is bad credit score in credit score range
Yes, it fits in the "Poor score" category. See link: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/credit-score-rating-scale.html
425 is a bad credit score.
When a Canadian moves to the U.S. their credit history in Canada is irrelevant. They will have no credit in the U.S. though, which can be worse than having bad credit. hi
If you move from Canada to the US and have bad debt in Canada will it effect your credit in the US?
The credit score 650 is really not that bad. With a 650 credit score you can finance a home or car.
This is a fair credit score.
583-619 is bad credit score in credit score range
Credit score that is around or more than 700 is considered to be good and score below 500 is considered to be bad. It is always advised to constantly monitor your credit score.
It depends on if the account was good and helping your score or a bad account that was holding your account down. Removing a good account cold lower your score.
paying off bad credit will take about 60 days to have an effect on your credit score. But, if you don't have any credit cards you will never have a good credit score because no one is giving you credit.
It's not consired, only your income and other requierments are. fafsa.ed.gov
629 is not a bad credit score, but it is not great either. A credit score of 629 means you have a medium credit risk. You probably won't have trouble getting a loan or a credit card, but you may not get the best interest rates or terms. You should focus on building your credit history and improving your credit score by making on-time payments and keeping your debt levels low.