How to increase your credit score:
Protecting your credit isn’t complicated—but it does require consistency. Think of it like maintaining a house: ignore it, and things quietly fall apart… usually at the worst possible time.
Pay Everything on Time
Your payment history makes up the largest chunk of your credit score.
Set auto-pay for minimums (at the very least)
Add calendar reminders for anything not automated
Even one missed payment can ding you for months
One 30-day late can drop your score fast—and lenders absolutely care.
Keep Credit Card Balances Low: This is your credit utilization—how much of your available credit you’re using. Aim to stay under 30% (under 10% is even better), Example: $1,000 limit → keep balance under $300 (ideally $100). Pay cards before the due date.
Check Your Credit Regularly: You can’t fix what you don’t see. Use free tools like AnnualCreditReport.com and pull reports from all 3 bureaus: Equifax, Experian, TransUnion. Look for: Errors, accounts you don’t recognize, incorrect balances or late payments. If something’s wrong—dispute it. Don’t just “hope it fixes itself.”
Don’t Open a Bunch of New Accounts at Once: Every time you apply for credit, it triggers a hard inquiry. Too many in a short time = 🚩 to lenders, space applications out when possible. This is especially important if you’re planning to buy a house soon—this matters more than people think.
Keep Old Accounts Open: The length of credit history matters. Don’t close your oldest card (even if you barely use it) and use it occasionally to keep it active. That dusty old card? It’s quietly helping your score.
Protect Against Fraud: Fixing identity theft is a nightmare you don’t need. Set up fraud alerts or credit freezes, use strong, unique passwords, avoid sketchy Wi-Fi when accessing financial accounts.
Mix of Credit: A healthy mix (credit cards, auto loan, mortgage, etc.) helps—but don’t go opening accounts just for this.\
Starting Doing This Today:
Set up auto-pay on every account, pay down any cards over 30%, pull your credit report this week, don’t apply for store cards