A Cuddly Toy
Tuesday 12th August, 2008 - £8,228.83 in debt…
I know I’m only three months into paying off my debt, but I can’t help thinking about things I’d like to spend my money on. It’s getting increasingly difficult to stop myself from getting more credit and buying a new car, a house, a holiday, maybe a nice 42″ TV… a cuddly toy?
Anyway, I’m not going to do that - I’m going to pay off my debts before I make any major purchases. Yes I am. But what happens if I pay everything off and my credit rating is still inexplicably poor? The credit crunch could make it very difficult for me to grab a mortgage, so I’d best get working on my credit score now.
The Money Saving Expert site has just launched a new credit scoring tool. This will tell you, at no cost, how much of a risk you are to credit companies. It will ask you ten easy questions, and you won’t even have to have any paperwork handy.
Neither borrowers nor credit reference agencies just have a ‘credit rating’ that applies for you across the board. The term is ‘credit score’ and it simply compares you against a mythical ideal borrower. It depends on factors that can be worked on or changed, and there is no such thing as ‘credit blacklisting’. There’s more information on credit scoring in this article.
Using the Money Saving Expert tool is quick and easy, and it allows you to consider how your score could be improved. For instance, it asked me how long I’d been living in my current house for - less than a year, one to three years, or over three years - suggesting that, once I’ve been here another year (it’s currently two years), my score will magically improve.
It also asked me how many credit cards I have, regardless of whether I use them. It emphasised that lenders get nervous about my access to credit - not just the credit I actually use - so I must remember to cancel all my credit cards as I pay them off. That was very useful to know.
Even though I’ve had no CCJs, never been bankrupt, and am on the electoral roll at my current address, a mixture of missed payments and loads of credit have made my credit score, in Martin’s eyes, “weak”. But, if I can make it to my 30th birthday according to the debt-paying-off plan, my credit score will change to “excellent”.
But that won’t happen if I forget to cancel any of my cards (as soon as I’ve paid them off), fall behind in my minimum payments (according to Martin, this could set me back years), or have a weak moment and apply for a loan on that coveted 207CC. Fingers crossed…