Managing Credit Cards to Raise Your Credit Score
18 July 2005
"Two years ago I had terrible credit, and you were kind enough to steer
me to a credit card company that would give me a card. Now I have three
cards, and my credit has improved some, but not enough…how do I manage
my cards to earn the highest possible credit score?"
Managing credit cards is more complicated than managing a mortgage or
auto loan, because you have multiple debts rather than just one. The
number of cards can vary, balances can be increased or paid down,
balances can be shifted between cards, new cards can be opened, and
existing cards can be closed.
Any such change may affect your credit score. Whether it reduces or
increases the score depends on whether the genie who scores credit
believes that the change will increase or decrease the probability that
you will default on future loans. The rules applied by the genie are as
follows, in order of importance.
Payment History
Payments made on time raise the credit score, while delinquent payments
reduce it. That is the most important rule by far.
Most card-holders understand this, but many also believe that the
reduction in credit score caused by a delinquency is reversed when the
card becomes current. This is not the case. Eliminating the delinquency
merely prevents a further hit to the score. Delinquencies stay on your
record for 7 years, although their force will weaken over time as
on-time payments come in.
Ratio of Card Balance to Maximum Balance
This is the second most important component of your credit score, and if
your credit history is short, it can be the most important.
The genie compares the outstanding debt on each of your cards with the
maximum amount of debt that the credit grantor has set on that card. For
example, if the balance on a card is $2,000 and the maximum balance is
$5,000, the utilization rate is 40%. The lower the utilization rate, the
higher your credit score. The genie interprets high ratios to mean that
the borrower is living closer to the edge.
Some experts advise that it is better to have about the same utilization
ratio across all your cards, rather than have some high and some low.
This would prevent borrowers from minimizing interest cost by
concentrating balances in the card(s) with the lowest interest rates.
I don’t know whether the genie favors an even distribution of balances
across cards or not. I suspect not, since the genie is logical and there
is no logical reason why the distribution of balances across different
cards should matter.
A card holder can reduce his utilization ratio by reducing his balance,
and also by increasing the maximum balance. If a borrower has had a good
payment record, the maximum can often be increased simply by asking.
Make sure that your card issuer reports a maximum. If no maximum is
reported, the genie assumes that the highest balance ever reached in
that account is the maximum, when in fact it could be well below the
maximum. This raises your utilization rate for no good reason.
If a card has no reported limit, you can either request that the limit
be reported, or terminate the relationship. Alternatively, you can shift
all your balances into this account temporarily so that the highest
balance comes closer to the unreported maximum.
Age of Cards
The genie likes old credit cards much more than new ones. The card you
have been using for 15 years is evidence of your financial stability,
whereas the card you took out last week could mean you are in trouble.
If you took out 3 cards last week, it could be big trouble.
To receive credit for old cards, they have to be active. If you don’t
use a card for 6 months, it is classified as inactive and the genie
ignores it.
Number of Cards
The scoring genie prefers that you have no more than 4 or 5 active
cards, but if you have 12, don’t worry about it. If you reduce the
number from 12 to 5, the genie will reward you for the reduction in
numbers but might penalize you for the increase in utilization that goes
with it.
Of course, there might be other reasons for reducing the number of your
cards, such as simplifying your life. If you do it, retain the older
cards and cancel the newer ones.