1. Canceling credit cards helps increase credit scores.
NOT TRUE! Canceling your credit card account adds to the shortening of credit age, which is included in the primary clinchers your credit rating. The scores on your credit report, therefore, will not improve if you do opt to cancel your credit accounts.
2. You can improve your credit rating by settling your installment loans.
NOT TRUE! Settling installment loans will not increase your credit score. The factor with implications on your credit score is not the total amount of money you paid for the loan, but the time you settled the debt. In fact, consumer credit report officers are only concerned with verifying if you paid for your balance on time or not.
3. You can only have one credit score.
NOT TRUE! Actually, you can receive as many as three credit ratings. Each of the three leading consumer credit reporting agencies in the country has its unique means of calculating your credit score. The calculations prepared by the three companies translate to three credit ratings with slight discrepancies. All three credit ratings are acknowledged by the Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO), which is the institution accountable for the calculation of your FICO credit scores.
4. You cannot erase a negative entry in your credit report before the seven-year requirement expires.
NOT TRUE! A bad marking, whether it is a late payment record or an existing loan item, can be removed from your credit report. You can initiate this by requesting a goodwill adjustment from your creditors or by reporting the imprecision of your credit details.
5. Credit scores are increased if you hold your credit account balance.
NOT TRUE! It is actually the opposite. It is absolutely all right to retain credit card activity; but it has no implications on your account balance. Maintaining a profoundly low balance or no balance at all is actually one of the best means to prolong a considerable credit score and improve it.
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