Sample 3 Bureau Online Credit Report Please
click on the section you wish to learn
about.
|
|
|
| Prepared for: JOHN CONSUMER |
Report Date: Nov 27,
2003 |
 |
| A Credit Score is a numerical
representation of your credit worthiness. The majority
of lenders use some sort of credit scoring model to help
predict what kind of credit risk you may be. For each
bureau’s score and personalized analysis, click on the
colored tabs below. | |
 |
|
.gif) |
This Credit Score is based on
information from your Equifax
credit report. Your credit
score is calculated using the information in your credit
report. Since information often differs among your three
credit reports, your credit scores based on those
reports will also vary. |
| Your Score is: 768 on a scale
of 350 - 850 |
Click
here for 0-100 scale |
Your Credit Category
is:
|
| Percentile: Your credit
rating ranks higher than 80% of U.S. consumers.
|
 |
 |
| About your
Credit Score: |
| Credit scores are based on the information in
your credit bureau record. The majority of CreditXpert
Credit Scores(tm) are between 350 and 850. Higher scores
are better. With a high score, you have a good chance of
getting the credit and loan(s) you want. Keep in mind
that when lenders consider a loan or credit application,
they generally ask for more information because credit
scores are not the only factor they use in making
decisions. Typically, this includes personal data (such
as income and monthly payments) used to determine your
ability to pay. |
| What your
Credit Score means: |
| Thanks to your very high CreditXpert Credit
Score(tm), you are likely to get the very best credit
and loan offers available from lenders, such as those
with the lowest rates and the lowest (if any) fees.
While you may still be able to increase your credit
score, it will probably not make much of a difference on
the type of offers you will get. The distinction between
offers will come from the additional information you
provide as part of your application(s), such as income
and monthly payments. These factors will determine
whether you can get the extra special low interest rate,
high loan amount, and/or other great features. |
| What this
Means to You: |
| Both negative and positive factors influence
your credit score. The most important factors of each
are listed below, in order of importance. Remember that
these factors vary in how strongly they impact your
credit score. For example, if you have a very high
credit score, the negative factors in your analysis are
likely to have a small impact. The same is true for
positive factors if you have a very low credit
score. |
| What factors
lower your credit score: |
Length of Credit History : You opened
your first credit account 4 years and 11 months
ago. This may not include accounts you closed more
than 7 years ago. This is making your score lower.
Having had credit accounts for a long time is a positive
factor because your history gives lenders information to
evaluate how you typically use credit and repay your
debts. Credit reports with approximately 30 years of
history are considered optimal. Meanwhile, up to 7 years
of credit history is considered short, and less than 3
years of history is considered too little. It is worth
noting that your accounts may have been open longer than
your report suggests, if lenders were slow to report
them to the bureaus. What matters is how long your
accounts have been in your report.
Credit
Accounts : The average amount of your credit
accounts is $1,441. This includes loan amounts for
fixed-payment ("installment") loans as well as limits on
your revolving accounts (such as credit and retail
cards). This is making your score lower. Having a
high amount of credit is a positive factor because it
indicates to lenders that other lenders have trusted you
by lending you money in the past. Meanwhile, having a
low amount of credit is a negative factor because it
indicates that either you are just starting to use
credit or you have missed payments in the past. If you
are just starting to use credit, lenders do not have
information to evaluate how you typically use credit and
repay your debts. If you have missed payments, you have
demonstrated that you do not pay on time, and lenders
may worry that you will not repay them.
|
| What factors
raise your credit score: |
Payment History : You have never missed
a payment, and no negative public records are listed on
your credit report.
This is making your score
higher. Missing payments is a negative factor. Some
cases are worse than others. For example, if you have
not missed any payments recently, lenders may think you
are (or have become) responsible and do not (or will no
longer) miss payments. Also, missing payments on only a
few accounts is not as harmful as missing payments on
most or all of your accounts, because lenders realize
that many people miss a payment (or pay late) once in a
while. Also, missing a single payment is not as harmful
as missing several consecutive payments because many
lenders consider missing 3 or more consecutive payments
as an indication that you may never repay them. Finally,
it is not as harmful to miss payments on accounts with
low balances as it is on accounts with high balances
because lenders stand to lose less money on low balances
if they remain unpaid.
Credit Usage : On
average, you currently owe $32 on each of your credit
cards. This only includes your open accounts. This
is making your score higher. High balances are a
negative factor (except for some types of installment
loans such as mortgages and auto loans), because lenders
worry that you are living beyond your means and may not
be able to repay them. This is particularly true with
credit card debts. Lenders do evaluate how much you owe
(your debt) in relation to how much you earn (your
income). However, changes in your employment and income,
or certain life events (such as divorce or illness), may
cause difficulty for you to pay your monthly bills.
Meanwhile, low balances are a positive factor because
lenders do not stand to lose too much if you become
unable to repay them. However, never using your credit
cards may be considered a negative factor. First, it
does not provide lenders with information about how you
typically use credit and repay your debts. Second, it
also means that you have a lot of available credit,
which you may decide to use if you experience financial
trouble.
Credit Applications : You did not
apply for credit in the past 6 months.
This is
making your score higher. When you apply for any type of
credit (such as a mortgage, auto loan, credit card,
department store card, etc.), your credit history is
checked by the lender considering your application, and
it is noted on your report as an "inquiry." Although
inquiries are a natural result of applying for credit,
lenders dislike seeing many within a short period of
time. This is because it is hard for them to determine
whether you are applying with different lenders in a
search for the best offer or if you are desperately
trying to obtain credit because of financial trouble.
Remember, making many applications in a short period of
time could hurt your credit score. Therefore, try to
limit your comparison to a small number of lenders when
"shopping" for the best
offer.
|
DISCLAIMER The
CreditXpert Credit ScoreTM is provided to help you better
understand how lenders view your credit report. It is
not an endorsement or a determination of your
qualification for a loan. Each lender has specific
underwriting standards, so you should not assume that
you will receive the same evaluation from each lender.
As part of the underwriting process, they will
incorporate additional information you provide and may
obtain references. In addition, even if you are
approved, the terms and conditions of loans vary from
lender to lender. The higher your credit score, the
better. With a better credit score, you are more likely
to be eligible for the best credit card and loan offers,
including terms and conditions, such as interest, fees,
benefits, etc.
The information used to determine your CreditXpert
Credit ScoreTM comes from
one of the major credit bureaus. Credit reports are a
compilation of credit information that is reported to
the bureaus by the various lending institutions with
which you have accounts. The information contained in
your report reflects the latest information provided. If
you recently made a payment, opened a new account, or
authorized an inquiry, it may not yet be reflected in
the credit report you receive. Likewise, it will not be
reflected in your CreditXpert Credit ScoreTM or CreditXpert Credit
AnalysisTM. Also,
disputed items are not incorporated in the assessment of
your CreditXpert Credit ScoreTM. Be aware that your credit score
will change each time new information is captured in
your record. In addition, the CreditXpert Credit
ScoreTM you receive is
only as accurate as the information it is based upon.
CreditXpert Inc. is not responsible for misinformation
(incorrect or missing information) provided by lenders,
which might lead to a counter-intuitive or even
incorrect analysis. Carefully review all the information
in your credit report to make sure it is accurate and
current. If you need advice about how to handle
financial problems, seek help from a non-profit credit
counseling organization.
The CreditXpert Credit ScoreTM is calculated based on many of
the same criteria considered by the leading consumer
credit scoring companies, producing in most cases a
consumer credit score that duplicates or closely
approximates the typical consumer credit score utilized
by banks, mortgage lenders, and loan companies when
determining creditworthiness. CreditXpertTM is not connected in any way with
Fair, Isaac and Company; the CreditXpert Credit
ScoreTM is not a
so-called FICO score. Neither CreditXpert Inc. nor
Neuristics LLC represent that the CreditXpert Credit
ScoresTM are identical in
every respect to any consumer credit scores produced by
any other company. |
COPYRIGHT Copyright © 2001
CreditXpert Inc., a subsidiary of Neuristics LLC. All
rights reserved. CreditXpertTM is a trademark of Neuristics LLC,
used under license.
 | | |
 |
|
|