Your Money: Are you up for a friendly credit score
competition?
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[February 26, 2019]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When personal finance
expert Jean Chatzky was buying a house years ago with her husband, she
got the shock of her life: His credit score was better.
“It was just really funny,” said Chatzky, financial editor of NBC’s
Today Show, host of the “Her Money” podcast and author of the upcoming
book “Women With Money.” “I am supposed to be the big financial expert -
and his score was 30 points better."
And so began a friendly marital competition that lasts to this day with
husband, career coach Eliot Kaplan. It has since toggled back and forth,
but “his is usually better,” Chatzky admitted.
Having such a competition is not just an academic exercise, or something
for bragging rights. It can have a very real effect on your financial
lives if two partners nudge each other in a positive direction. Higher
credit scores could save you a ton of money over the course of your
lives.
“If you have a goal to buy a home together in a few years, then better
credit scores will benefit both of you: You will see lower interest
rates, more affordable monthly payments, and maybe even be able to buy a
better house,” said Bethy Hardeman, personal finance expert for the
debt-management app Tally.
And how exactly do you boost that magic score? The strategies are
extremely common-sense. Pay your bills - on time, every time. Do not use
up too much of your existing credit; try for 30 percent or less of your
ceiling. Have credit with multiple different lenders, all of which are
reporting your trustworthiness to the credit agencies.
THERE IS A 'BUT'
Love and money are notoriously combustible partners. Mixing them
requires a delicate touch, as if you were handling explosive chemicals.
So how to have a healthy credit-score competition, without causing any
marital upset? Some tips:
* No judgment
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Even if your score is an iffy 500 and hers is a robust 700, or vice versa –
resist the temptation to make moral judgments, keep things positive, and move
forward together as a team.
* Have patience
You are not going to see massive success right away, no matter how dedicated you
are to boosting your score.
“The frustrating thing about credit is that it is like losing weight – you won’t
necessarily see pounds slipping away on the scale every day or week,” said
Chatzky. “So don’t check in too frequently.”
* Use it as a conversation starter
If there is anything most couples really hate to talk about, it is money. So a
friendly credit competition is one way to crack that door open, and have an open
and honest conversation about money issues beyond just credit scores.
“My partner and I do this as a fun discussion,” said Ian Harvey, a financial
planner in Chappaqua, New York.
* Do not strive for perfection
In theory, the best possible FICO credit score is 850 (although different credit
agencies have developed their own scoring models).
But do not drive yourselves crazy aiming for perfection. Instead, focus on
getting to levels that will make your financial lives appreciably easier.
At 660, you should start being approved for most credit applications, said
Hardeman. At 720, you should start seeing some of the best interest rate offers
available. And if you can make it to 760, you are attractive enough a credit
risk that you will be getting unsolicited mailers from lenders all the time.
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
(Editing by Beth Pinsker anf Steve Orlofsky)
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