What damages your credit rating and what doesn't

Serena Cowdy
by Lovemoney Staff Serena Cowdy on 26 May 2009  |  Comments 6 comments

The better your credit rating, the cheaper it is to get credit. So what really damages your credit rating - and what doesn't? Serena Cowdy investigates.

What damages your credit rating and what doesn't

Last week, an incident involving my credit card provider made me cross. I'm going to tell you about it - so you know exactly where you stand if it happens to you.

The end of the line

For just over a year, I've had a Virgin Money card. I transferred some debt onto it at the beginning of that period, and I've been gradually paying it off (at 0% interest) ever since.

Last week, I finally cleared the balance - hooray! The card had done its job very nicely, and, because I no longer had use for it, I phoned Virgin and asked to cancel the card and close my account.

The customer service chap told me that if this was the only credit card I had, I would damage my credit rating by closing it.

I was surprised but, assuming this was just a ploy to keep my business, I politely but firmly closed my account in double-quick time.

Afterwards, however, I started to worry. Was it just a stunt to encourage me to spend more on the card? Or could what he told me actually be true?

The truth behind the spin

Following my run-in with Virgin, I did some research into how canceling a card can affect your credit score. Here's what I found:

To maintain a healthy credit rating, it is a good idea to have some credit arrangement in place - or to have a fairly recent history of one. This will show potential lenders that you're a responsible and reliable borrower.

This doesn't have to be in the form of a credit card; it could, for example, be a personal loan, mortgage or other regular repayment plan. Having two different lines of affordable credit - and servicing them regularly - is ideal from a credit record point of view.

If you have no credit cards, have never HAD any credit cards, and have never borrowed in any other capacity, you won't have much of a credit history at all. That lack of evidence may well mean that lenders are unwilling to deal with you.

However, it's not a good idea to keep cards open if you're no longer going to use them. Dormant cards are at greater risk of fraud (because you won't be checking your statements regularly). On top of this, having unused credit limits all over the place will make potential lenders wonder what you're up to.

In short, there's no rule that says closing a credit card will or won't damage your credit score - so many variables are involved.

Personally, I have a long history of taking out credit cards and loans, and paying them back on time. Although I don't have any other credit cards now, I do have two other loans that I'm servicing regularly. As a result of both these factors, closing my Virgin card will almost certainly not substantially affect my credit rating.

I think the 'advice' I received from Virgin was actually a sweeping generalisation (presumably designed to keep my business) which took little or no account of wider circumstances.

In the interests of fairness, I should say that the Virgin Money card is a market-leading credit card, offering the longest 0% interest period on balance transfers (16 months) at the moment. And, according to the Virgin Press Office, it is not standard practice to tell customers that closing down an account will damage their credit rating.

Still, it happened to me - and I'm not impressed!

So what does damage your credit rating?

To help you separate the wheat from the chaff, here's a quick rundown of the main factors that could damage your credit record:

Missed/late payments: Paying bills on time is generally the most important way of maintaining a good credit score.

If you default on a credit agreement, you're likely to be viewed as a high-risk borrower for some time to come. Any late payments will remain on your credit report for at least three years.

Repeated applications: Applying for a lot of credit over a short period of time (typically more than twice in six months) can make lenders think you're desperate, and regard you with suspicion.

No electoral presence: Lenders will check that you are who you say you are by looking at the electoral roll. If you're not on it, you may be seen as less stable (or at least trackable) and be refused credit on this basis.

A bad financial association: If you're 'financially associated' with someone who has money problems, their debts could be damaging your chances of getting credit. To find out what 'financially associated' means, read Don't let a partner ruin your credit rating.

High levels of unused credit: This can occur if you have several, dormant credit cards and other accounts still open that you no longer use.

Your credit record is also likely to be seriously damaged if you have any County Court Judgments against you - or if you've been made bankrupt in the past.

If I want to maintain my good credit rating, what should I do?

Whatever your situation, don't let your card provider scare you into spending more on a card that no longer suits your needs.

You can get a free credit report from Experian, to help you work out exactly where you stand. Just remember to cancel your membership before the 30-day trial period is up, to avoid being charged in the future.

If you have other credit agreements you're still servicing (such as a mortgage) or you have a strong recent history of using credit, canceling that credit card should make no difference at all.

And if you do decide you want to keep using a credit card to maintain your rating? Think about whether the card you've already got is really the best one to use.

For example, my Virgin Card was good for dealing with a balance transfer, but I wouldn't want to use it for new spending. For that, I'd choose a card that offered decent cashback or other reward incentives.

Whichever card you end up with - make absolutely sure you clear the balance every month. Sinking deeper into debt certainly isn't the way to build a good credit record!

More: Demolish your credit card debt | Three cheap ways to borrow money

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Comments (6)

  • sandman1600
    Love rating 0
    sandman1600 said

    So what happens when your bank or creditor makes a c0ck up (such as recently when transferring accounts from Natwest to A&L) and payments aren't taken from my direct debit?

    I get letters telling me I've missed payments when I haven't or it's not my fault... does that make me a bad debtor?

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • vdub
    Love rating 0
    vdub said

    I recently did a credit check on Experian and it said that i was fine, although I missed a catalogue payment recently and that showed up (which surprised me!!). My partner was made bankrupt about 5 years ago, and altough I have NEVER been financially linked to him- no mortgage, cards etc, it has his name linked on my credit report. Is this right? As I was in no way linked to his bankruptcy and am credit worthy, i even have savings, why am I linked to his name? We live at the same address, but that is rented accomodation, and I was under the impression that it wasnt the address, it was the people who affected the credit ratings? Can anyone help? Can I have him removed from my report?  

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • gardener
    Love rating 25
    gardener said

    vdub

    write to the credit reference agency and supply evidence that you are not financially linked to him (sole bank account statements, council tax bill in your name, that kind of thing), I have successfully challenged CRA's on their flimsy and wrong facts and got most of them removed but it did involve some work!

    I have solved the credit reference agency malarkey I think: I just don't do credit anymore. Problem solved!

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • sk1
    Love rating 6
    sk1 said

    To follow up on gardener's post, I write to say that I checked all 3 of my credit files (Experian "CreditExpert" - my arse!!, Equifax and Callcredit) 3yrs ago

    I should state at the outset that I am a very financially astute, responsible person, who has never had a missed/late payment and who is wealthy and credit-worthy

    I was amazed at the amount of distorted, incorrect, out-of-date and missing information.

    Experian were by far and away the worst, Equifax bad but less so whereas Callcredit were more or less spot on, with "only" 3 minor errors

    These are just some of the numerous errors:-

    There was an "association" with my brother, based on his being an additional card holder 10 yrs ago

    As I have lived in flats, their systems seem unable to cope with a flat number, house number and house name and they showed me as not being on the Electoral Roll

    Experian had 70-odd "linked addresses", all being my current and 2 previous addresses, with various minor variations, and often confusing the flat and house numbers. Importantly, I would only ever have provided the correct address to all parties, as used by Royal Mail and the Electoral Roll

    Accounts that were active at my present address showed under previous addresses and vice versa

    Equifax states it includes Land registry info, but did not show my house purchase

    I disputed many, many entries, which took ages to sort out. Answers were frequently inconsistent. They would say my Notice of Correction would be applied, but on checking i would find it had not been

    I corrected an incorrect spelling of my name, and they then listed the old, incorrect name spelling as an alias

    They would say an entry had been updated after a query, and I would discover later on checking that it hadn't

    ID searches by a lender would show as a credit search

    I could go on but you get the idea

    The issues are made more difficult as you are aware that you are dealing with junior, poorly trained, motivated and transient staff who understand considerably less of the issues than you do

    They have a blanket ploicy of not paying any compensation, stating it is the fault of lenders, and lenders saying it's the CRAs' fault

    Their regulator is the Information Commissioner, who has no power to award compensation and is a toothless regulator. If you have an issue , you have to deal with it first through the CRA, and then repeat all the informtion/make your case again with the IC, FOR EACH AND EVERY ITEM of disputed info

    I personally think that the conduct and regulation of these CRAs is a national scandal. They are responsible for dealing with confidential and sensitive personal data, which ought to require the most meticulous standards. They fail miserably.

    And if I have had these problems with my personal info, how much more difficult and incorrect must it be for those who do actually have credit problems?

    I have previously written in to Working Lunch and Watchdog, suggesting that an exploration of these CRA(p)s would be good investigative journalism. No reply

    Does Lovemoney want to have a go?

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Ofolaller
    Love rating 0
    Ofolaller said

    sk1 ("... ...")

    .

    Yes, I agree with what you say. But what is particularly horrifying is the vigour with which CRAs carry out their in LDCs (the "third world" counrties) where people often get seduced into buying goods (clothes, furnishings for their shacks, etc.) on credit, often at exorbitant rates by shark lenders, truly usurers, predictably default on their debts, and then inevitably end up with utterly unclearable blacklisting by the CRAs (yes, the same experian, equifax, etc. opertaing from thewir posh US and UK offices, oblivious to the tribulations of life in the LDCs). That is truly tragic.

    .

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • ThatLindseyGuy
    Love rating 114
    ThatLindseyGuy said

    I'd agree with sk1 up to a point, if you've never looked at your credit report it is almost inevitable that there are several mistakes on it.

    But to defend the CRAs a little, its worth mentioning the 'chinese whisper' effect that they have to work around in that none of the information on the credit reports has been collected directly from the subject but rather from public records and from lenders.

    Report on 27 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  1 love

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