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Are You Avoiding These Mistakes To Improve Your Credit?

If you'd like to discover the secrets of establishing and maintaining a positive credit history (to prove your creditworthiness to secure an approval for a home mortgage, car loan, furniture purchase, cellphone plan, etc.), then this might be one of the most important articles you'll ever read.

Why Some People Almost Always Default On Their Credit Card Debts

Do you know that all credit card agreements are legally binding contracts, most of which contractual arrangements authorize the credit card company to raise your rate if you have missed or are late on any of your bills, not just your monthly credit card payments? Because most credit card holders don't read and retain their credit card agreements, it is imperative that you read and retain your copy.

Missing or being late on your monthly credit card payments can cause you to default on your credit card debt(s). If you are not careful, your erratic payment activity will negatively reflect on your credit history and can also deny you additional credit in the future until you have resolved your debts in full. To avoid problems, read and retain your credit card agreements. You'll be very glad you did.

Avoid Paying the Bare Minimum Payment Every Month

Although it is in your best interest to make timely monthly payments to help your credit rating, paying the bare minimum can adversely affect you, resulting in your remaining credit card debt to accrue interest charges. Despite what the minimum payment due is stated on your billing statement, your credit card issuer(s) is actually showing you a small portion of your actual balance

In fact, if you don't make new purchases on your credit card, the interest can accumulate and the amount of credit card debt that you accumulated may take you several months or even years to pay off your credit card debts. Sadly, the interest can accumulate at an alarming rate if the balance is not paid in full at the end of the month. Don't be misled by the minimum payment imprinted on your credit card billing statement. Better yet, you should responsibly budget your finances and pay off your debts in a measured, timely fashion. Doing so will make it easier to re-establish positive credit after your debts are paid off in full.

How Would You Like To Eliminate The Credit Card Annual Fee Without Using Unethical Credit Repair Tactics?

If your credit card(s) carries an annual fee, don't close that account if it still carries a balance. Instead, call your credit card issuer and ask the customer service representative if they have another card that doesn't carry an annual fee to which your current credit card account could be transferred. Surprisingly, an ever increasing number of credit card issuers are willing to comply, resulting in your keeping the account open but eliminating the annual fee. If your credit card issuer doesn't have a card without an annual fee, don't fret. Simply pay off your current credit card debt in full as soon as possible; however, do not close the account because your timely, monthly payments will reflect positively on your credit report.

Note: Never close a credit card account on which there is a remaining balance. If you think your credit card company is "friendly" now, you should see their "wrath" arouses later once your account has been closed.

Learn the Importance of Avoiding Impulse Buying

Making unintended purchases is a risky consumer behavior, which will result in your being pushed over the credit limit, at which point you will bombarded with over-limit fees and penalties. Ultimately, your credit score will be greatly lowered by your inability to make timely monthly payments.

Obtain and Review a Copy of Your Credit Report

Did you know that a poor credit history can ruin your credit score? Have you recently checked the accuracies of your Credit Report? If not, it is imperative that you get your credit report and see why your credit score is so low. Because most credit card issuers report to all three major credit bureaus, you must get all three credit reports.

Remember, a good credit history can help you qualify for a future new home mortgage, automobile loan, apartment lease, new job, etc. It is advisable that you check your credit history, from all three consumer reporting agencies, at least once a year. Moreover, you must review and correct any errors that might negatively affect your current or future credit rating. To obtain copies of your credit report, call or write the three major national credit reporting agencies.

Equifax Credit Information Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 740241
Atlanta, GA 30374
Toll-free: 1-800-685-1111
Web site: www.equifax.com

Experian National Consumer Assistance Center
PO Box 2104
Allen, TX 75013
Toll-free: 1-888-397-3742
Web site: www.experian.com

TransUnion, LLC
PO Box 1000
Chester, PA 19022
610-546-4600
Toll-free: 1-800-888-4213
Fax: 610-546-4605
Web site: www.transunion.com



Andreas Eriksen is a writer and Weblogger for Juaxoo (pronounced wah-zoo) located at <b><a href="http://www.juaxoo.com">www.juaxoo.com</a></b>, a travel Web site providing fast, relevant information at the click of a mouse.


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By Carlos De Paula

A look at most people’s postal boxes these days would give impression that banks are giving away money. If you have good to fair credit, you get tons of credit card offers. If have a crummy credit rating, you are still getting offers, many with life saving low APR balance transfers. Even if you have just filed for bankruptcy, you will still get less savory offers, but they will be there.

It is very easy to have enough credit corresponding a few times your annual salary. These offers are often quite appealing, with zero to 3.9% APRs, great offers on balance transfers, and often banks raise your credit limit within 6 months, if you pay your credit cards on time.

Sounds good, after all, at zero percent you cannot go wrong. It is money given away!

Not so fast. When you sign a credit card application, you normally believe you have a contract set in stone. Just like any other contract, you believe, any changes would need to be agreed by both parties, in advance, and should be negotiable. Guess what, credit card companies, as a normal course of business, amend the contracts unilaterally, without asking your permission and without negotiation. If you use the card again, you are agreeing with the change!

These changes normally have to do with the appealing APRs that first prompted you to get the card and instruments whereby banks can increase them punitively. Back in the old days, if you were late on credit card payments you would get a nice call, the day after the payment was due. And a nastier one 10 days after. I suppose banks eventually figured that most people were normally late due to an honest oversight, sooner or later, and thus the rules of the game were changed. Initially, banks began charging late fees, which often amount to more than 30 dollars, every month you are late. You would no longer get a call, just a $30.00 bill on the next statement.

Adding insult to injury, if you do have quite a few bills to pay, eventually you might be late a couple of times a year. So the banks perceived, I guess. Now, if you are late at least twice in the course of a consecutive 12-month period, the bank can increase your APR, on the ground that you have just become a little bit of a higher risk. So, your appealing zero percent credit card, suddenly becomes a 12 %, then an 18%, until becoming a ridiculous 30% APR credit card.

By that point, you might be trying to shift credit card balances to new offers, and thus try to manage your APR crisis. Guess what. A lot of credit card companies have a policy of obtaining your credit report every once in a while, and you might have an immaculate record with them, never been late a single time in 20 years, but the fact that you goofed with bank “X”, which is in no way affiliated with them, gives them ground to hike up your APR. All of a sudden you are no longer one of the their best clients: it does not matter that you shifted a $5,500.00 balance to their appealing 6.7% APR last month. Your new APR is now 18%, more than the 16.7% of the card you shifted from!

And the story goes on, and on. By the time you are through with them (which might be never in most cases), you have an unmanageable debt, all done lawfully.

You might ask, why do banks lend out such huge mounds of money to people they know will not ever pay the full balance, because they are incapable of sustaining such high debt load? And why do so with unsecured credit, in other words, based on a promise to pay, without any collateral? We might instinctively believe that the amount of deposits a bank holds gives it “value”. Our instincts are wrong. The reality is that in accounting, the deposits are considered a liability. Why so? Because the bank has to pay the deposit back. So what gives a bank real “value”, is put it simply, assets, are operations that will generate money for it, among them, loans.

Although secure loans are safe, they generate a little spread (the difference between the cost of money to the bank, and the interest paid by the borrower). The real bucks are in unsecured credit, such as credit cards. Additionally, not only are there big bucks in unsecured credit, but also “big fat”.

In this day and age of mega bank mergers, banks have to prove they are good prospective partners by the sheer volume of loans on their portfolios - the fat. Not only that, it does not matter for a bank that you are only paying the minimum due every month. If you that, you are giving them profit, which is what they need to build fat for potential mergers, and build value in their balance sheets, wherefrom big year-end bonus will come for management. Really, a 65 year old bank president cares less if you are still going to be paying your credit card 20 years from then, he wants his bonus now! So, in a nutshell, the “system” serves them well, even if they know an “x” number of people will eventually file for bankruptcy or simply stop paying the bills.

Some folks have taken the position that bankruptcy might be a good way to “get back at the system”, essentially becoming professional Chapter 7 filers. However, the bankruptcy laws have been changed, and the general opinion is that the new law will not make life easier for debtors. Using bankruptcy “to get back at the system” is indeed a thing of the past.

So, my advice to you is, keep the number of credit cards you have to a minimum. If you can, pay off your entire balance at the end of the month. If you can’t, never pay only the minimum due. If at all possible, don’t get any store credit cards, which always have high APRs from the start, and which are generally more aggressive collectors. Use the old system of saving money to make major purchases and never exceed a year’s income in credit card debt. Don’t let the situation get out of hand: consolidating your debt might be a good idea, and always do it sooner, rather than later.

YOU CANNOT WIN THE CREDIT CARD ROULETTE. DON’T TRY IT.




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It is possible to fix your bad credit, with time, patience and determination. The first step in repairing poor credit is fixing any problems you may have with money.

1) Get a credit reports on yourself and check out what is on them. To get yours free go to www.annualcreditreport.com. You are allowed by U.S. law to get a free copy from each of the three major credit companies once every 12 months.

2) Once you have your credit reports, check them for accuracy. If there are any errors or things you disagree with, you are entiltled by the Fair Credit Reporting Act law to dispute anything in the report that is not accurate. Write to the credit reporting company and explain what the problems are. They will then investigate the matter and let you know what happens. If they find the information is not accurate, they will fix that on your credit report.

Unfortunately you can?t remove anything negative that is accurate information about you. Only time can do that. But adding more good information does help.

3) If your credit needs repair, start work on it now. Start paying off old unpaid debts and loans, starting with the smallest ones.

4) Start paying more than the minimum payment on your current credit card payments.

5) Do not get into any new debt. This is essential. Make it a priority to get out of debt. Cut up (or lock up) the credit cards, if they are a problem for you. Make it a commitment to become debt free.

6) Live within your means. Make a budget and live by it.

7) Start saving money. If you have poor credit, it is much easier to buy a home or a car with a cash down payment, than without one.

There are many sources of help available. Consumer Credit Counseling Service is one of the best for help repairing credit and getting debt under control. Their website is located at http://www.cccsintl.org. Consumer Credit Counseling Service provides budget counseling, educational programs, debt management assistance and housing counseling. There are also many local branches of this nonprofit organization, so check for one near your location.

There are many ?for profit? organizations that will help you with debt consolidation loans, but beware! They often are very expensive. You can get free reliable help that you can trust from a non-profit organization like Consumer Credit Counseling Service instead of paying hundreds of dollars to one of them. Or, you can educate yourself and do it for free.

Some other good places to go online for more credit and financial advice are listed on my website at http://i-can-buy.com/resources.html.

By Alexis Dey ? 2006. For ideas on how to buy a house when you can?t qualify for a home loan because of poor credit, look for the FREE e-book, ?Buying a Home When You Have Bad Credit,? at <A HREF="http://i-can-buy.com">http://I-can-buy.com</A>.


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Your credit report can be one of the most important pieces of information when it comes to your financial health. It is important that you have an understanding of all that it contains and how it relates to future credit you may apply for.

Your credit report says a lot about you

Your credit report tells a lender what kind of borrower you are. It tracks late payments, collection requests, and bankruptcies. It also tracks on time payments, loans that are paid off, and accounts that are opened and closed. It is your history and it can affect your future.

Too much credit can hurt you

It seems silly, but having too many credit card accounts on your credit report can actually hurt you even if you have no late payments and carry a low balance. Lenders worry that because you have the ability to run up high credit card bills, you might accrue a large debt and be unable to pay them back because you have other bills to pay. If you have credit cards in your wallet that you seldom use, close the accounts. Instead of carrying three gas credit cards, trim down to one, or put your gas purchases on a general use credit card.

What you don?t know can hurt you

Credit reports contain a lot of information about you and with the volume of information they are compiling, it is possible that it contains some mistakes. Perhaps you have closed an account that your credit report states is open or you have paid off a balance that is still listed. Whatever the discrepancy, if you notice an inaccuracy on your credit report, it is up to you to contact the credit bureau and get it corrected.

What you don?t do can hurt you

Missing credit card payments costs you more than just late fees. Having late payments reported on your credit report can keep you from getting a home loan or even buying a car and once accurate negative information is on your credit report it takes 7 years to get it erased. It is important to make your payments and make them on time and to carefully consider every purchase you place on a credit card.

Visit <a href="http://www.abcloanguide.com/freecreditreport.shtml">http://www.abcloanguide.com/freecreditreport.shtml</a> for a list of credit report agencies. View our recommended sources to <a href="http://www.abcloanguide.com/freecreditreport.shtml">check your credit report</a> online.


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