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Archive for the ‘Credit’ Category

What is a good credit limit for a first credit card?

Michelle W asked:


I got my first credit card a couple years ago via Bank of America, and my current credit limit is $9000. Since I don’t have any experience with credit cards in the past, I’m wondering if this is good or not? Is there anyway I can increase this limit? What do most credit card limits start at?

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What is the best credit card for people with no credit?

Taryn asked:


I am 18 years old, I have no credit history. I am looking for a credit card so I can build my cred history. What are the best credit cards for individuals like myself? Thank you!

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Credit Repair: How to Undo the Damage

Chane Steiner asked:


With appropriate measures and the right information, you can repair your credit rating and increase your credit scores. This one fact, however, is only half the battle. Because there is so much misinformation tossed around regarding credit repair, finding the truth and learning your federal rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act is a must. Once you understand how the American credit system works, you are on your way to living a life of financial prosperity.

Here you’ll find a few steps that will aid you in your efforts to repair your credit scores:

Obtain Your Credit Report

Request a copy of your credit report from the three major consumer reporting agencies. This will also tell you what your credit scores are.

Evaluate Your Credit Reports

Once you have your reports, you’ll want to ensure the information is correct. There are mistakes in nearly 80% of all credit reports.

Dispute Questionable Items

If you discover an inaccuracy or accounts you’re not familiar with, dispute it with the reporting credit bureau. If the creditors cannot verify an account, the bureaus must remove all references from your credit report.

Consumer reporting agencies receive thousands of disputes each day. These disputes are handled by employees who make minimum wages with only a very short time to investigate each dispute. If the negative accounts aren’t removed after your initial dispute, don’t despair. It make take a few efforts to get the CRAs to remove the account. Be patient and allow four to five weeks between your efforts.

Pay Off Bad Debt

Paying off your most recent past due accounts can increase your credit scores. Use caution when paying on accounts more than a few years old, as paying them can bring your down your scores even more by triggering a “current” status on the account.

Negotiate with the creditor to update the account to reflect “paid as agreed” or to remove the account BEFORE you pay it. It’s difficult to convince the creditor to update or remove it after payment because you don’t have as much leverage. That said, it sometimes is easier to dispute paid accounts with the consumer reporting agencies.

Maintain and Utilize Credit to Your Advantage

Another important aspect with raising your credit scores is to keep your existing balances below 35% of your available credit limit. You’ll also want to minimize the number of inquiries you make by not applying for credit unless absolutely necessary.



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How can I get my credit build up if no one will give me a credit card to begin with?

jjkk asked:


How can I get my credit build up if no one will give me a credit card to begin with? I have never had a credit card, I bought a home and I have been paying mortgage on time. Will that help my credit? I do have doctor bills on my credit report, any ideas as to how I can get rid of them without costing me a arm and leg.

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Scams Involving Credit Repair

Nicholas Boler asked:


It is a sad reflection of the world that we live in today that so many different people are not only able but actually willing to profiteer at the expense of other people, and seek to make a quick buck from other people’s misfortunes. The so called credit crunch has really caused a massive global recession meaning that more and more people are finding it difficult to obtain credit and loans and worse yet, are finding that poor or even less than perfect credit ratings are coming back to haunt them. Such people will either find their applications rejected outright, or if they are extremely lucky will be granted a loan with rather excessive interest rates attached to them.

A person’s credit rating/score is used as by financial institutions to determine the level of risk that the applicant poses, and whereas previously money lending was a boom industry with rather lax criteria, now the financial organizations are seriously tightening the net so to speak. With loans with affordable repayment schedules becoming ever increasingly hard to come by many people are going to rather extreme lengths to try and salvage their rather poor credit score.

A rather sad effect of all this is that whilst the legitimate finance sector has declined, the illegitimate one has expanded rapidly and among all of the scams that crooks will subject victims to, one of the most increasingly common and popular is the credit rating repair scam. This scam involves a company purporting to help repair a poor credit rating and in some cases (if their own overblown, bombastic hyperbole is to believed) actually resurrected from the dead.

Consumers, please note that there is an entire wealth of information provided for credit agencies, the federal government and through citizen advice bureaus. This information is readily available in the public domain and is totally free and so if a credit rating repair company should ever demand a fee for their services then walk away very quickly.

If they happen to require a fee to be paid upfront before any sort of advice or counseling is provided then be prepared to never see your cash again. Such companies that engage in such practices tend to have a rather nasty habit of mysteriously disappearing never to be found usually within an extremely short time frame.

These fraudulent companies prey on human weakness and peoples desperation and so they often make offers that are incredibly tempting. One such example is where credit repair companies will offer their clients an opportunity to create an entirely new credit account which will allow for the client to quash all their outstanding debts, and start afresh to deal with creditors as they so wish. Think about this logically for a second. If every consumer were able to do that, then how on earth would the finance sector have any guarantee that people would be able to afford the repayment schedules? How could banks determine beyond reasonable doubt that a prospective client is who they purport to be? Exactly.

While this offer sounds tempting, there is a very simple word for it: fraud. The government takes a very dim view on this particular form of credit repair, and the law makes no real distinction between the credit company that instigated the idea and presented as a valid and legal option and the unsuspecting consumer who was an unwitting part of this criminal conspiracy.

Ignorance of the law is not a legitimate legal defense, and so you may find it a hard sell trying to convince the judge that you did nothing wrong.

Poor credit ratings is a major concern and because of the significant potential for abuse and criminal conduct, the government has founded a number of different initiatives each of which are intended to help educate consumers as to their rights. Being creditworthy, paying bills on time and being a responsible consumer is a big requirement but a necessary evil. The government has no wish to see consumers struggle with debt and poor credit ratings and so will be more than happy to advise consumers as to the best possible course of action to take for any given situation.



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