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304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
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When you apply for and accept a new loan or credit account, your credit scores typically decline a few points. This impact is short-lived, however, and scores typically rebound within a few months. Eventually, they may even wind up better than before as you demonstrate your ability to responsibly manage your new debt. Here’s an overview of how a new credit account can impact your credit score.
Your credit scores are based on a statistical analysis of your credit usage patterns to determine the risk that you’ll miss a payment in the future. When new information is added to your credit reports, credit scoring systems such as the FICO® Score and VantageScore® may reflect it in your credit scores based on the level of risk it represents.
Your scores may drop when you open an account because it’s not yet clear how well you will manage your new debt. Your scores should rebound within a few months, however, once you show your finances are stable by continuing to pay your bills.
Credit scoring systems track new credit by detecting new inquiries and accounts on your credit reports at the national credit bureaus (Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax). There are two types of inquiries:
The hard inquiries that result from applying for multiple credit cards or other revolving accounts in quick succession can have a compounding negative impact on your credit scores. A good approach to comparison shopping for credit cards is to seek preapproval to compare estimated offers.
With installment accounts, including mortgages and auto loans, you’re able to submit multiple loan applications to compare interest rates to find the best loan product. Rate-shopping, as it’s called, is a smart practice that credit scoring systems are designed to accommodate. They treat hard inquiries for multiple loans of the same type as one event if they occur within a relatively short timeframe.
Current versions of the FICO® Score treat applications made within a 45-day window as a single hard inquiry; older versions of the FICO® Score still used by some lenders apply a 14-day window. The VantageScore applies a “rolling two-week window,” that prevents score reductions on comparable installment loan applications submitted in succession at intervals of two weeks or less.
The key to a quick rebound from a drop in credit score related to a new account is to make sure your credit reports reflect stability and steady credit management.
A small drop in credit score is a normal result of applying for and taking on new debt. A rapid score recovery is an equally normal consequence of managing that new obligation wisely by keeping up with payments, maintaining prudent credit balances, and refraining from taking on too much new debt in a short timeframe. When the time is right for a new credit card, preapproval is your best bet for comparing deals. Experian’s card comparison tool can streamline the process by showing you multiple preapproval offers at once.
For any mortgage-related needs, call O1ne Mortgage at 213-732-3074. Our team is ready to assist you with confidence and expertise.
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