ironymaiden: (bumbler)
[personal profile] ironymaiden

(I wouldn’t normally talk about money stuff publicly, but other people should know, so feel free to share. This is in the US.)

  • your bank or credit card shows you a free FICO credit score; there’s at least four different formulas and the one used for mortgages is not the same as the one the bank shows you

  • I ignored getting and reviewing my annual free credit report because that score looked so good. It’s not a substitute, I apparently have a small medical debt on my report that I wasn’t aware of that I could have researched and handled a couple years ago

  • we’re debt-free. It was a lot of work, I’m proud of it, and it lowers my credit score. i knew about this bullshit “problem” but I learned from a Slack comm today that it’s possible to take out a small installment loan (under $1000) every so often and pay it off to improve your credit (this is a thing you can still get with bad or no credit)

these three things added about 0.25% to my mortgage pre-approval interest rate. fortunately it’s not make or break for us, but over 30 years that will add up, please learn from my mistake

anyway, still got approved, interviewing a realtor on Monday. Excelsior!

Date: 2023-01-21 03:20 pm (UTC)
sleepybadger: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sleepybadger
Congratulations! Also, I 100% agree about being debt free lowering your credit score. Last time I needed to get financing on something they were like oh, there's a ding on your credit score, and then said it was because I didn't have any long-term debts that I was making payments on. Yeah, I paid off all my shit, it was a lot of work and I'm so happy it's done, and this should be a positive, not a negative! Gah.

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