Thursday, January 5, 2012

What You don't Have to Worry About Affecting Your Credit Score

There are a lot of factors that go into making up your credit score, from how often you pay your bills on time to the age of your various accounts.  When you’re trying to clean up your credit report, knowing which areas to focus on can make the credit repair process much easier and go by quicker than you may have initially thought.
This article will focus on the other side of the coin; the stuff you DON’T have to worry about.  Because while knowing what you do have to worry about taking care of is important, knowing what doesn’t matter as much to credit repair can free up any additional worries you may have.  With that said, here are 5 things you don’t have to worry about ever affecting your credit score.
  • Your income.  You’ll typically find personal information like past addresses and employment info listed in your credit report, but one area of your finances that you don’t have to worry about showing up is your monthly income, both past and present.  Creditors and lenders are more interested in what you do with money than how much of it you have.
  • Your rent.  While your credit card and car payments will routinely show up on your credit report, you won’t have to worry about your past rental history coming back to haunt you.  Unless you consistently are late on your monthly rent payments and your landlords are trying to evict you, this is another area you don’t need worry about.
  • Account overdrafts.  If your bank account is ever in the red for whatever reason, you can rest a little easier knowing it won’t show up in your credit history.  While overdrafts are generally something you want to avoid anyway (those fees are a real pain), your bank won’t typically take the time to beat you while you’re down and report the overdraft to the credit bureaus.
  • Your utilities.  Just like your past rental history, you won’t have to worry about utility bills showing up on your credit report, either.  Anything from electric and cell phone bills to insurance accounts generally stays off your report unless they fall into collections.
  • Any type of credit counseling or credit repair services.  Some people are afraid to seek any type of credit counseling or credit repair service because they’re afraid it might show up on their credit reports.  You can rest easy knowing that no one reports your use of a credit counseling service to the credit bureaus; you’re allowed a cheat sheet on this exam.

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