this post was submitted on 15 Feb 2024
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*Laughs in european
At least in France, they look at your income, your eventual debt monthly payments, and see if you will be able to pay more or not.
A lender will look at those things, as well as a credit score. Lots of folks in this thread are mistakenly trying to make credit score more than it is.
That's not at all a universal rule, and a low credit score can even affect employment in the US.
FICO Credit scores weren't even invented until 1989, when the US middle class began it's slow death.
Paying off loans early lowers your score. Using a credit card with a higher limit increases your score. It's never ever been a way of establishing that a person is trustworthy to receive a line of credit, it is a scam to put more people into debt and keep them there.
No one opts in to have a private company collect (and lose) their private information. You're born into a credit score.
Ive only ever carried a mortgage and a small car loan as debt. My cc are paid in full every month. My credit is consistently well into the highest category. It's certainly a game, but an easy one to play if you have any type of self discipline, and I've never felt like it's kept me in debt.
I understand that companies use them improperly, but that isn't he fault of the credit score. Thats the fault of the employer (or our lack of laws protecting employees). Nowhere does FICO sell their credit score product as an employment screening tool.
I don't believe thats true. Paying off a loan might lower your score, but I don't believe there is anything in the model that takes into account whether it is early payoff or not. Feel free to cite a source that backs your statement.
That's incorrect. Having a card with a high limit, and having only a small revolving balance on it (or no balance) can improve your score. Another way to achieve the same thing is multiple cards with with low to no balance that adds up to a larger total limit.
I'm not sure what you're saying here. If a person is able to limit their behavior in spending above a certain percentage of their credit line, then that is a pretty good objective measure someone is trustworthy of certain levels of lending to them. Do you question that?
There is no law saying that you are required be involved in borrowing. If you've never opened any line of credit, you won't have a score.