How to Dramatically Increase Your Credit Score in 2022 - YouTube

Channel: Ask Sebby

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Credit is kind of like trust.
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It takes a long time to build, but you can destroy it in an instant.
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Hey guys, Sebastian from ask Sabby today, we are going to look at how to rapidly increase
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your credit score in 2021 as always chapters tool down below.
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Big favor from you guys is to give this a thumbs up because there probably will be some
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anti credit people who watch this video.
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And if you are someone new here, want to get that extra cash back and maybe some subsidized
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trips then consider some.
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We're pretty much all about how to maximize her credits, who leverage it for other things.
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One question, I get a lot for videos like this is why even bother.
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Just get a job.
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Don't be poor.
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You don't have to worry about putting credit.
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The average credit score right now in America in 2021 is seven 11.
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If you're below this, then it's obviously fine, but you might be handicapping yourself
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for a lot of things.
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If for someone just coming out of school or you're pretty early in your career, then you
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might need to bring it up.
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If you are in a super competitive place for rentals, then it might make it impossible
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to find something that is actually good, even worse.
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I've actually seen some pretty shady behavior by landlords where they try to make you pay
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even more money up front because you don't have a good score.
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I feel like finding a place is stressful enough that you don't really want to add to that.
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If you have the luxury of living at home, then that's great.
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But for a lot of people, you might need to move to a different city because that's where
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the opportunity.
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If you have bad credit, then that can actually affect your it to work in some industries.
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So for something like finance or accounting, they want to make sure that you're not at
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risk for either selling that information or using it in an inappropriate way.
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Imagine you were auditing Tesla.
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So you see all this financial information.
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Do you try to trade on that, which is insider trading for some branches of the military,
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they do it as part of the enlistment process.
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And then for some other ones, if you are trying to go for that promotion, get that security
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clearance, then they also do a.
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Mortgages are pretty obvious.
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And unless you're super rich, you probably do need to finance it.
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You could do something called manual underwriting, but I feel like you don't want to make that
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process more difficult if you don't need to, especially for something as big as a mortgage,
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those little interest rates can make a huge difference.
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So you just want to position yourself the best you can.
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Okay, cool.
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So with all of that said, what is your credit score?
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It's a way to measure how reliable you are in terms of paying off your debt.
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There's a ton of misconceptions, but the basic idea is that they want to see that if they
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give you all this credit, can you be responsible?
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35% of your credit score is going to be your payment history.
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So do you pay off what you owe?
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30% is going to be the amount owed.
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This is a utilization.
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There are a ton of tricks here, and we'll cover those towards the second half of the
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video.
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15% of your score is going to be your credit history.
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So how long have you had these cards?
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10% is going to be new credit, which represents inquiries.
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So are you actively looking for.
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For example, someone applying for one a month would be less risky than someone applying
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for 10 a day.
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Why are you applying for so many?
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Is there something going on?
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Why am I wearing this hat?
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The last 10% is going to be your credit mix.
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And this is also one of the traps that I think people get caught in.
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This is basically the type of debt products that you actively use.
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Before we dive into all the tricks.
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I ended up doing a poll on the community tab.
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And if you are part of the 50% of people who want to fix your score, but you're maybe putting
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it off, you're saving it down your plan to do one on the weekend.
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And then that weekend turn to the next year because new year's resolution time might as
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well fix my score then versus now, if you are someone who stuck, I ended up making a
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community on viably as a disclaimer.
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There's no secret sauce.
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And there are silver bullets.
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A lot of people have been able to get pretty good scores just by watching these.
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The main point of it though, is accountability.
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And number two, to help you build out a spreadsheet to manage everything and to improve your score
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in a very short amount of time, it's really easy to talk about all the principles, but
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making them bite-size pieces and actionable ones should help.
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A lot of people.
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Ironically, this spreadsheet is also high managed 30 plus cards.
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So if there is a secret sauce, then it's a secret sauce.
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It is $8 a month, but it's intended to be a one month bootcamp.
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$8 also keeps the bots out of the system who are offering free crypto.
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There's also some psychology around.
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If you pay for something you're more incentivized to actually go through it compared to free
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information.
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Some people are probably going to be surprised that I'm charging only $8 and not 80 or 800.
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And I probably could get away with 800, but that's not really.
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End of the day.
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I want something that the average person can afford and is about the price of two coffees
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are one in San Francisco where I live again, viably linked down below.
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If you want to check it out, if you already have great credit and you have a system for
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everything, then you're good to go.
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Don't worry about that.
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If you do want to learn about cards though, then consider using the ones on our site,
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ask sebi.com and also the one-stop.
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In the description box, probably the easiest way to support the channel.
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So thank you guys in advance, diving back into it.
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Why do I think credit mixes a trap or trap number one, it forces you to get debt products
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that you might not actively need.
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So for example, I live somewhere where I don't need to have a car.
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I can pretty much walk everywhere or take public transit, but for a lot of other people,
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they have cars for me.
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It doesn't really make sense to get an auto.
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Just to increase my score because that's pretty stupid.
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A lot of other instruments like student loans, mortgages, and auto loans have an expiration
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date.
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Once we finished paying it off, then it's effectively closed and it does keep aging
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for a little bit, but it eventually falls off.
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So you're saying if I pay off my student loans, then it hurts my credit, but if I keep it
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and I keep paying interest, then that helps.
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This is ironically why credit cards are so powerful and why we focus on them so much.
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They're one of the few products where you can get away not paying any interest and it
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still helps her credit score longterm.
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The cool thing is that you don't need to spend a ton on them.
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Let's do a deep dive on the other factors other than credit Mets.
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So I actually made a chart for this two or three years ago, and I noticed that some blogs
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and also some other YouTubers have decided to copy it and just replace my logo with something
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else.
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Ironic because I had the keynote file for it.
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I ended up doing something a little bit different.
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Okay.
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Let's start off inquiries.
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And this is the thing that most people get.
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Inquiries do not matter as much as you think they do in the early game.
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Maybe it does hit you for 10 20, 30 points because they're still new to everything.
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But once you have that base up, it's only going to hurt maybe one to five points.
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So it's a lot better later on, but that sounds super confusing.
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The easiest parallel is.
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So when you're working out, technically you're destroying your fibers and then your body
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is coming back and repairing them or replacing them in order to build additional muscle.
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So working out is taking two steps back and then five steps forward because they're damaging
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it in the short term, but longterm it's making it better.
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Inquiries are part of the game ends.
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Michael Scott has a pretty good quote on this.
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You miss a hundred percent of the shots that you don't.
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The cool thing too, is that after one year the inquiry stops affecting your score.
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And after two years it actually drops off completely.
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There was probably a period where I had 20 or 25 inquiries, some crazy amount, and they're
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gone.
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They don't really show up anymore.
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So inquiry's low impact.
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And another low impact.
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One is going to be total accounts.
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The idea being that the more that you can manage the better it is.
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So for example, imagine a manager who can manage a team of 20 people, and then you compare
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it to one.
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Only manage a team of four people, obviously a lot more goes into it, especially for someone
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like Michael Scott, but for a lot of people, you would say that the person who can manage
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20 on average is probably a little bit better.
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I would recommend thinking strategically about this and adding the right cards rather than
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just racing to the end and trying to add as many as possible.
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If you are someone who wants to maximize your subsidized trips are the cashback.
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Then I'd recommend watching our 5 24 video just to make sure that you're not getting
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locked out of any system.
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Basically each non chase card you add can easily cost you something like $500 in subsidized
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travel, moving into the medium impact zone.
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We have average age of accounts online.
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You'll probably see this as a oh a in case that looks weird to you.
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Age of account is how long you've had that card or that product.
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And the average age is the average among the current.
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There are some systems that focus on only your oldest cards.
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So that's something to be aware of.
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You generally want to keep your oldest card for that reason.
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This is why I recommend downgrading instead of canceling some of those cards that you
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have that option for.
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So for something like the chase Sapphire preferred, maybe you're getting that bonus and then cashing
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it out year two.
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It doesn't make sense.
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Just downgraded into a no annual.
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Freedom flax that keeps the accounts age.
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It doesn't cancel it.
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It doesn't do anything.
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And then it just keeps aging.
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It doesn't hurt you.
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Long-term because there's no annual fee kind of related.
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But if you have a closed account, it actually does stay on your credit report for up to
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10 years, if it's good history and up to seven years of its bad history, it does keep aging
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with you.
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But at the tender point, it does drop off.
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So you would want to have some other cards with you rather than nothing at the.
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Moving into the high impact zone.
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We have derogatory marks.
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These are negative items on your credit report.
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Also known as badly as, but in the bad way.
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So thank miss payments.
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Collections, foreclosures them, collecting your car back.
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Completely forgot the word for that.
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But it's repossessions.
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These are generally items.
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I can take her score in the longterm, so you'd want to watch out for them and try to avoid
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them.
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If possible payment history is another high impact zone and this is effective.
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Total number of on-time payments divided by number of total payments who should have made.
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So for example, if I have a card for 12 months and I made 11 of those payments on time out
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of the 12 payments, then I'm at 11 divided by 12.
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Looking at the chart, you can tell that a hundred percent is the best and it does get
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progressively worse, pretty quick.
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Early on.
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This is one of the easiest things to mess up because you don't have enough on-time payments
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that one miss payment does dramatically pull that down for someone currently at a hundred
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percent, then auto pays her friends.
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If, for someone currently in a bad spot, because life does happen, then I'd recommend paying
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at least a minimum amount.
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That way there's an on-time payment.
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If you do have to keep that balance for, let's say another month, you end up paying interest
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on that.
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So not ideal, but at least we don't have any negatives on your credit.
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There are some tricks involved where you can kind of artificially increase your total payments.
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So for example, let's say you have four cards, but you only actively use one of them.
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For the other three cards.
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You can put very small transactions on them.
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Let's say one, $2.
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That way there is a payment that's due at that statement date, and you're paying it
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off.
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If you only have one on-time payment every month, then it's going to take a lot longer
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than having a bunch of them.
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I have two suggestions for this are going to be Amazon reloads because you can do them
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for 50 cents and then also self checkout.
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But only if there's no one else behind you, this also ties into a utilization trick that
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we'll cover in this.
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Utilization is a pretty high impact factor.
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And it's how much of the credit that has been extended to you that you actively use for
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a lot of other things like student loans, that doesn't really matter that much.
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Most of this is going to be impacted by credit cards.
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The rationale is a mortgages doing loans, auto loans.
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They know that that's a long-term thing that you're going to pay off over time, rather
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than something that's supposed to be paid off.
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Well, you need to carry a balance and then pay interest in order for your credit to increase.
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The credit industry wants you to have higher balances because that benefits them.
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I run up Lee, not really the case.
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It actually benefits you to have a lower utilization.
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There's two types of utilizations.
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One is across your whole portfolio of cards.
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The other one is going to be on a per cart basis.
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The first one is generally a red flag for bust out.
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So if you are someone who is likely to max out your cards, run away to something else
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and just not pay them back.
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This is often when issuers will either set your cards down, ask you for tax returns to
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make sure that you're good for it.
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Get some income verifications are sometimes just cut your card off for now.
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Maybe not even let you charge it until you pay that balance down.
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It can also happen on a per cart basis or on a per issuer basis, because they might
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have too much exposure to you.
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But a lot of people who are trying to increase their score the per card basis is what kind
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of screws them over.
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The tough thing is that you might have a card that has a lower limit and you want to use
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it because maybe it earns more points.
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There is a trickier though.
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When you think of utilization on a per cart basis, it's basically a snapshot on a specific
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date.
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When that statement closes.
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Let's actually do a real life example because I think that makes it a lot simpler for people.
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I have a card that is from August 17th until September 16th.
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So we know that on September 16th at midnight Eastern time, they're going to be taking that
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picture.
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You do want to do payments before that because for a lot of them there isn't like a 4:00
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PM cutoff and it does differ by cardiac.
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It was a $5,000 credit limit, but I ended up using $4,682 for some reimbursable work,
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spent doing the math that's 93%.
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And if we look at the chart, that's terrible.
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If this ends up posting to the credit report, when they take that picture, it's going to
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take my score.
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Even though I have $200,000 in credit limits across other cards.
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And if you look at this number, it only represents about 2%.
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It still looks bad on a per card basis.
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So knowing when picture day is I ended up cleaning myself up.
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So I ended up paying $4,680 right beforehand.
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This means that my utilization is two 50 divided by $5,000 effectively, 1%, even though it's
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more like 0.05.
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So by doing this prepayment, treating it as a pay as you go card, you can protect your
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credit history during busy times where you might have more expenses such as the holidays
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or back to.
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As long as I pay off the $2 and 50 cents before October 10th, I don't pay any interest.
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And I also have another on-time payment for my credit history.
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One obvious question is why not just pay off the whole balance in full before picture day,
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rather than leaving a small amount.
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If you have a lot of cards, if you have a pretty long history than I would argue that
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it doesn't matter too much, but I did this mostly for this.
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ABCD 2, 1 9, 9 from phyco form has a pretty good chart here.
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And if you look at it, you can see that there's a dip at 0%.
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And then there's a peak towards 1, 2, 3, and 4%.
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Basically 0% is fine, but 1% will technically be better.
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And it doesn't really even need to be that much money.
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It could be $2.
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If you are someone paying off all the cards before picture day, then make sure that you
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have at least one card that has a payment that's due and it can be a tiny.
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The reason for this is because you want at least one on-time payment every month, I've
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seen some people's credit score dropped because of this because they had no activity evolve.
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This sounds very confusing.
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Then I'd recommend checking out that viably course, just because I think it is a lot easier
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to learn over a period of time, kind of like studying versus trying to cram everything
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in bright before the exam, whether you want to have two or three cards are 40 cards.
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I think having that foundation is pretty.
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But the OGs who've been watching this as a refresher video.
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If you are someone that wants to learn about other cards, whether cashback travel, anything
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else, and you want to support the channel links down below, and also on our website,
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ask savvy.com.
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Make sure that the offers competitive, but otherwise huge way to support.
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My question for you guys is what's your credit score and what's holding it back.
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Let me know.
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And everyone else know in the comments down below, if you'd like to give it a thumbs up.
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And if you know anyone else who would benefit from this, because it is pretty helpful, I
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think then feel free to share this with them because we'll probably help them out.
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Otherwise, I hope you guys liked it.
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So he hasn't.