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CREDIT EDUCATION
How Scoring Helps You
Credit scores give lenders a fast, objective measurement of your credit risk. Before the use of scoring, the credit granting process could be slow, inconsistent and unfairly biased.
Credit scores - especially FICO® scores, the most widely used credit bureau scores - have made big improvements in the credit process. Because of credit scores:
People can get loans
faster.
Scores can be delivered almost instantaneously, helping lenders speed up loan
approvals. Today many credit decisions can be made within minutes. Even a
mortgage application can be approved in hours instead of weeks for borrowers
who score above a lender's "score cutoff". Scoring also allows retail stores,
Internet sites and other lenders to make "instant credit" decisions.
Credit decisions are
fairer.
Using credit scoring, lenders can focus only on the facts related to credit
risk, rather than their personal feelings. Factors like your gender, race,
religion, nationality and marital status are not considered by credit scoring.
Credit "mistakes" count for
less.
If you have had poor credit performance in the past, credit scoring doesn't
let that haunt you forever. Past credit problems fade as time passes and as
recent good payment patterns show up on your credit report. Unlike so-called
"knock out rules" that turn down borrowers based solely on a past problem in
their file, credit scoring weighs all of the credit-related information, both
good and bad, in your credit report.
More credit is available.
Lenders who use credit scoring can approve more loans, because credit scoring
gives them more precise information on which to base credit decisions. It
allows lenders to identify individuals who are likely to perform well in the
future, even though their credit report shows past problems. Even people whose
scores are lower than a lender's cutoff for "automatic approval" benefit from
scoring. Many lenders offer a choice of credit products geared to different
risk levels. Most have their own separate guidelines, so if you are turned
down by one lender, another may approve your loan. The use of credit scores
gives lenders the confidence to offer credit to more people, since they have a
better understanding of the risk they are taking on.
Credit rates are lower
overall.
With more credit available, the cost of credit for borrowers decreases.
Automated credit processes, including credit scoring, make the credit granting
process more efficient and less costly for lenders, who in turn have passed
savings on to their customers. And by controlling credit losses using scoring,
lenders can make rates lower overall. Mortgage rates are lower in the United
States than in Europe, for example, in part because of the information -
including credit scores - available to lenders here. Knowing and improving
your score can also lead to more favorable interest rates.
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