Credit scores are based on information in your credit reports and are influenced most by payment history. Also important is how much of your available credit you use (keeping utilization under 30% will help your scores). Length of credit history, having a mix of accounts and recent hard inquiries also matter. Pay on time and try to keep balances low.
Learn more about what goes into your credit scores.
Closing a credit card can lower your scores for a few reasons. Two of the biggest: It reduces your available credit (raising your credit utilization) and it can shorten your active credit history. If you’re worried about high fees or interest, one option could be to keep the account open but transfer your balance to a lower-interest credit card.
Read on: How closing a credit card can affect your credit.
Yes, high card balances can hurt your scores, because scoring models, like VantageScore and FICO, consider credit utilization. Credit utilization is the amount of credit you’re using vs. your limits. If you make a big purchase against your card’s limit, help protect your scores by paying down your balance as soon as you can to keep utilization below 30%.
Keep reading about how your balance impacts your scores.
Scores can drop when a lower balance causes changes to other factors — like credit mix or average age of accounts. A drop can also result from factors unrelated to the balance, like lower credit limit, another account’s rising balance, late payments or an account closure. Be sure to review your reports for errors and aim to keep utilization below 30%.
Learn more about the factors that can lead to a credit score drop.
A balance transfer can affect credit in good and bad ways. Scores may dip from the credit inquiry and because the new account lowers average account age. If you pay off but keep the old account, credit utilization could improve, boosting scores. And a transfer may make it easier to pay down debt, which is good for credit over time.
Read more: Balance transfers and your scores.
Use your credit cards regularly but lightly. Aim to keep overall and per-card credit utilization below 30% as much as possible, since lower usage helps your credit scores. Try making payments before your statement closes, or multiple times monthly, and spread spending across cards to avoid overusing any one card.
Keep reading: Credit card utilization and your scores.
Credit utilization, the amount of credit you’re using compared to your credit limit, significantly impacts your credit scores. It makes up 20% of your VantageScore 3.0 scores and 30% of your FICO scores. Lower utilization is generally better for your scores, so aim to keep utilization below the recommended 30% on your cards whenever possible.
More about credit utilization and your scores.
No, utility and phone bills don’t usually impact your scores, because generally those providers don’t report to the credit bureaus. But, unpaid accounts sent to collections will likely get reported and significantly hurt your scores. There are opt-in services that will let you submit utility and phone bills to the bureaus — though this can backfire if you miss a payment.
A hard inquiry typically occurs when a third-party company formally requests your credit file after you apply for credit. Hard inquiries can cause a small, temporary dip in your credit scores and usually stay on your credit reports for about two years. To reduce the impact, space out applications and confirm whether the check will be a hard or soft inquiry — soft inquiries don’t affect your scores.
Learn more about hard credit checks.
A soft credit inquiry, or soft credit check, is a review of your credit reports that doesn’t come from formally applying for credit. Examples include viewing your own report, prequalification offers and general account reviews by existing lenders. Soft inquiries don’t affect VantageScore or FICO credit scores. By contrast, hard inquiries typically follow credit applications and can negatively impact scores.
Keep reading about soft credit checks.