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Credit Inquiries
To learn about credit inquiries
and how they may or may not affect your credit score, choose a
topic below or scroll down the page.
- What is a credit
inquiry?
- A credit inquiry is an item
on a credit report that shows a business with a "permissible
purpose" (as defined under the federal Fair Credit Reporting
Act) has previously requested a copy of the report.
-
- Not all inquiries
count toward your score.
- When you check your credit
report, you may notice that a number of credit inquiries have
been made, sometimes from businesses that you don’t know. But
the only inquiries that count toward your credit score are the
ones that result from your applications for new credit.
- Inquiries that
count toward your credit score.
There is only one type of credit inquiry that counts toward
your credit score. When you apply for a mortgage, auto loan
or other credit, you authorize the lender to request a copy
of your credit report. These types of inquiries, prompted by
your own actions, appear on your credit report and are
included in your credit score.
-
Inquiries that don’t count
toward your credit score.
Your own credit report requests, credit checks made by
businesses to offer you goods or services, or inquiries made
by businesses with whom you already have a credit account do
not count toward your credit score. Credit checks by
prospective employers also do not count. These types of
inquiries may appear on your credit report, but they are not
included in your credit score.
- Your score is not
affected when you check your credit.
- Checking your credit reports
regularly to be sure they are accurate and error-free is a
good idea. In fact, maintaining accurate credit reports is a
part of good credit management, which can help to improve your
scores over time.
- You can order all three of
your credit reports with scores at www.mycredit.com. You can
also order your credit reports from the credit bureaus. Either
way, your score is not affected by your own credit report
checks—which are voluntary.
-
- How
inquiries are factored into credit scores.
- There are five types of
information used to calculate a credit score at any given
point in time. Each type of information counts as a percentage
of a total credit score:
-
-
| Payment history |
= 35% |
| Amounts owed |
= 30% |
| Length of credit history |
= 15% |
| New credit |
= 10% |
| Types of credit in use |
= 10% |
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- These percentages are based
on the importance of the five categories for the general
population. For particular groups, such as people with
relatively short credit histories, the importance of the
categories may differ.
-
- Inquiries are a subset of the
"new credit" category shown above, which accounts for 10% of
the total credit score. Their importance depends on the
overall information in your credit report. For some people, a
given factor may be more important than for someone else with
a different credit history. In addition, as the information in
your credit report changes, so does the importance of any
factor in determining your score. What's important is the mix
of information, which varies from person to person, and for
any one person over time.
-
-
Inquiries may or may not affect your score.
- A credit score takes into
account only voluntary inquiries that result from your
application for credit. The information about inquiries that
can be factored into your credit score includes:
- Number of recently opened
accounts, and proportion of accounts that are recently
opened, by type of account.
- Number of recent credit
inquiries.
- Time since recent account
opening(s), by type of account.
- Time since credit
inquiry(ies).
-
- A credit score does not take
into account any involuntary inquiries made by businesses with
whom you did not apply for credit, inquiries from employers,
or your own requests to see your credit report.
-
- For many people, one
additional credit inquiry (voluntary and initiated by an
application for credit) may not affect their score at all. For
others, one additional inquiry would take less than 5 points
off their score.
-
- Inquiries can have a greater
impact, however, if you have few accounts or a short credit
history. Large numbers of inquiries also mean greater risk:
People with six inquiries or more on their credit reports are
eight times more likely to declare bankruptcy than people with
no inquiries on their reports.
-
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What happens when you apply for credit.
- When you apply for credit,
you authorize the lender to ask for a copy of your credit
report. This is how voluntary inquiries appear on your credit
report.
-
- The inquiries section of your
credit report contains a list of everyone who accessed your
credit report within the last two years. The report you see
lists both voluntary inquiries, spurred by your own requests
for credit, and involuntary inquiries, such as when lenders
order your credit report to offer you a pre-approved credit
card.
-
-
Will my score drop if I apply for new credit?
- If it does, it probably won't
drop much. If you apply for several credit cards within a
short period of time, multiple inquiries will appear on your
report. Looking for new credit can equate with higher risk,
but most credit scores are not affected by multiple inquiries
from auto or mortgage lenders within a short period of time.
Typically, these are treated as a single inquiry and will have
little impact on the credit score.
-
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What to know about "rate shopping."
-
- Looking for a mortgage or an
auto loan may cause multiple lenders to request your credit
report, even though you’re only looking for one loan. To
compensate for this, the score counts multiple auto or
mortgage inquiries in any 14-day period as just one inquiry.
In addition, the score ignores all mortgage and auto inquiries
made in the 30 days prior to scoring. So if you find a loan
within 30 days, the inquiries won't affect your score while
you're rate shopping.
-
-
Improving your credit score.
- If you need a loan, do your
rate shopping within a focused period of time, such as 30
days. Credit scores distinguish between a search for a single
loan and a search for many new credit lines, in part by the
length of time over which inquiries occur.
-
- Generally, people with high
credit scores consistently:
- Pay bills on time.
- Keep balances low on credit
cards and other revolving credit products.
- Apply for and open new
credit accounts only as needed.
-
- Also, here are some good
credit management practices that can help to raise your credit
score over time.
- Re-establish your credit
history if you have had problems. Opening new accounts
responsibly and paying them on time will raise your credit
score over the long term.
- Check your own credit
reports regularly, and before applying for new credit, to be
sure they are accurate and up-to-date. As long as you order
your credit reports directly from the credit bureaus, or
through an organization authorized to provide credit reports
to consumers, your own inquiries will not affect your credit
score.
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