When buying a home your credit means everything. A prospective lender wants to see how you will handle credit for buying a home and the only way to find that out is to see how you have handled your credit in the past. There are five factors that make up your credit score. Miss any of them and you don't get the points for that section. For example:
Factor
Percentage of Possible Points
MaximumPoints Earned
Accumulation
1.How You Pay Your Bills
35%
192.5
492.5
2. Revolving Balances
30%
165
657.5
3. Length of Credit History
15%
82.5
740
4. Mix of Credit
10%
55
795
5. Credit Inquiries
10%
55
850
As you can see each one of these factors can either add or take away points to your credit score. Just as they can be positive they also have negative affects such as; late payments, no credit cards, no credit at all, old credit but no new credit to offset the bad debt, to many inquiries, high credit balances.
Hope this answers your question and you are able to see how important your credit is when buying a home.
OF Course it does! IF you just got bankrupt it does hurt your credit score really badly!
yes they do, they impact your score greatly
Usually closing accounts will hurt your score because if you have debt on other cards, your debt to available credit ratio will rise and it can ding your credit score.
Too many inquires on your credit report can hurt your score since it may appear that you are applying for too much credit at once.
It only hurts your credit score when someone else pulls your credit report.
OF Course it does! IF you just got bankrupt it does hurt your credit score really badly!
yes they do, they impact your score greatly
Usually closing accounts will hurt your score because if you have debt on other cards, your debt to available credit ratio will rise and it can ding your credit score.
Too many inquires on your credit report can hurt your score since it may appear that you are applying for too much credit at once.
It only hurts your credit score when someone else pulls your credit report.
Actually, it does. It uses the available credit you have so when that goes down the credit score does too.
yes
It should not hurt your credit score unless you don't pay.
Definitely, your credit score isn
yes
If you are not able to pay your many student loans, your credit score will be hurt. If you consolidate, you have a better chance of having a lower monthly payment that you can handle. A lower score that you will be able to pay, which in turn will only help your credit score.
They could further hurt you credit score. You will pay a higher interest rate which makes paying the payment that much harder which puts your credit even lower.