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You are here: Home / Banking / Credit Cards / Building A Good Credit Score

Building A Good Credit Score

October 8, 2016 By Twila VanLeer

Use card responsibly and pay each month's bill on time.
Use card responsibly and pay each month’s bill on time.
Building a good credit score doesn’t happen overnight. There are steps you can take to assure good credit from the outset and establish yourself on a positive note. They include:

Credit Reports

Check to see if you have a credit report. You could have established credit without being aware of it. For instance, if you have been authorized to use a family member’s credit, you might have a credit report. It is also possible that you have been a victim of identity theft, and that definitely needs to be cleared up before you start building credit in earnest. WalletHub is one site that offers credit reports and scores that are updated daily. If you find a report under your Social Security number, analyze it and if necessary, dispute errors, fraudulent accounts and negative records related to unauthorized use.

Get A Credit Card

Starting with a clean slate, open a starting credit card. It is usually pretty easy. There are some that don’t charge an annual fee or require you to incur debt as loans do. They report to the major credit bureaus on a monthly basis.

Three options for a starter card include student credit cards, general use cards for people with limited credit and secured credit cards. You have to have an active college or university email address to get a student credit card. A secured card offers the best opportunity to get guaranteed approval without the risk of overspending. The alternative to a starter card is a loan, usually for home, car, student use or other need that requires debt with interest.

Use Your Credit Card For 6 Months

Use the card responsibly for at least six months. That will generate a credit report and score. The score could range from bad to well above average, depending on what you did with the card and how well you paid. This first report is critical, because it puts you under the credit score microscope. Mistakes will be magnified beyond what they would be if you were a seasoned credit user.

Pay Bills On Time

Pay each month’s bill on time and keep your utilization of the card below 30 percent – 10 percent for the best result. Never use all the credit they extend to you. Setting up automatic payments from a deposit account is helpful in meeting these standards. Responsible handling of the initial card will help when you are ready to apply for a higher credit limit.

Study Your Credit Report

When you have a sense of how your initial foray into credit card use went, continue to study your credit report regularly. By looking at all of the components of the report, you can gain a sense of how the system works and be prepared for long-term credit use. You can learn to adjust course if any element of your report seems out of sync.

A responsible journey into the world of credit can set you up for life in what is an important element in ongoing personal finance.

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Filed Under: Credit Cards, Free Credit Report, Spending Habits Tagged With: credit cards, credit score, money management

About Twila VanLeer

Journalist/writer for more than 50 years. Pulitzer Prize nominee, 1983 for coverage of the first permanent artificial heart. More than 50 national, regional, local awards for news writing. Main writer for a memorial book for Deseret News' 150 th anniversary and for a book recounting the 1997 re-enactment of the pioneer trek from Omaha to Salt Lake City. Co-writer and editor of "True Valor," a book on the history of the artificial heart. Author of the book, Life Is Just A Bowl Of Kumquats, a wonderful story of a house wife and her trials with raising a large family.

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