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If you're in the market for an auto loan, one of the first
things you should do is take a look at your credit report. This
document provides the data that goes into calculating your credit
score; your credit score, in turn, plays a huge role in determining
what interest rate lenders will charge on your loan and whether
you'll be able to get a loan to begin with.
Awash in numbers and data, a credit report can look like
gobbledygook to the uninitiated. Getting up to speed on how it
works is clearly important. Let's unlock its secrets.
Your credit report is a document that comprehensively details
your credit payment history. Ever owned a credit card? Or taken out
a bank loan? If you have, it's likely that information regarding
your account activity will be reflected on your report. But this
sort of payment data isn't all that your report will contain.
Typically, four types of information
are reflected:
- 1. Personal information
- This includes your name, spouse's name, social security number,
current and previous addresses, birth date and current and previous
employers. This data is culled from your past credit applications,
so its accuracy is dependent upon how completely and honestly you
fill out forms each time you apply for credit.
- 2. Credit information
- Included is information regarding each of your accounts with
banks, retailers, credit card issuers and/or other lenders. Credit
limits as well as loan amounts and balances are detailed, along
with payment patterns going back a few years.
- 3. Public information
- This includes bankruptcies, tax liens and monetary judgments,
and, in some states, overdue child support.
- 4. Inquiries
- Included are the names of those who requested and obtained
copies of your credit report.
Not all of this information remains
on your credit report permanently.
- Positive credit information will remain on your report
indefinitely, although information about an account will fall off
your report if nothing new is reported for seven years.
- Negative credit information remains on your report for up to
seven years after the date of the original delinquency.
- The length of time for which a bankruptcy will dog your credit
depends on the type of bankruptcy that you file. Chapters 7, 11 and
12 remain on your credit report for 10 years. If you file a Chapter
13 bankruptcy (under which all or part of all debts owed are repaid
under a court-approved payment plan), it will be deleted from your
report after seven years. All other public record information
typically falls off after seven years.
- Inquiries are typically cycled off your report after one to two
years, depending on the type of inquiry.
There is, of course, some personal information that your credit
report does not reveal. It doesn't reflect information about your
race, religious preference, medical history, personal lifestyle,
personal background, political preference or criminal record.
The following points shed some light
on how lenders evaluate your report:
- As one would expect, on-time payments are viewed as a plus by
potential grantors of credit.
- A low debt-to-income ratio (under 20 percent) is ideal. This
ratio is calculated by dividing your total monthly debt (rent or
mortgage payments plus credit card minimum payments plus loan
payments and the like) by your total gross monthly income.
- Lenders tend to frown upon those with too many credit cards.
The available credit on these cards is viewed as being potential
debt.
- Late payments hurt your rating. The later the payment (whether
30, 60 or 90 days) the more of a negative it will be.
- Frequent requests for additional loans or credit cards can
count against you. If you've had more than four inquiries made
within the past year, it will hurt your chances to get new
credit.
- Numerous changes in address and/or employment may also hurt
your rating. Lenders like stability.
- As one would expect, items like bankruptcies and charge-offs
are viewed negatively.
If you find information that you believe to be incorrect in your
credit report, you'll need to address it. Contact the credit bureau
in writing, including documents that support your position. Make
sure your letter lists your name and address. Clearly identify the
item you believe to be invalid, explain why you think it is
erroneous and request its deletion. The credit agency must
reinvestigate disputed items, usually within 30 days. The law
states that erroneous information, or disputed information that the
credit bureau is unable to verify, must be deleted from your
file.
You're probably wondering how get a copy of your report. It may
be ordered from any of the three credit bureaus  Experian,
Trans Union and Equifax.
Remember, forewarned is forearmed. Even if you're not currently
hunting for a car loan, it's a good idea to take a look at your
credit report now. That way, problems can be addressed before they
have a chance to hurt your prospects.