Credit Score Concerns
If you have experienced being declined for a credit card or any loans, most likely, you have been offered a free credit report through snail mail in order for you to review and see why you have been declined. Unluckily, the numeric score that will determine the approval process cannot be found on these free credit reports, which makes consumers more confused. That being said, how does a free credit report given through snail mail 10-14 days later with no numeric score actually help educate an individual as to how why exactly they were declined? It actually doesn’t. You now have your 20-30 page credit report a week after the fact filled with verbiage that reads about as easy as mumbo jumbo.
Such free credit reports have the status and payment history of outstanding lines of credit and other financial obligations that include credit cards, charge accounts, home mortgages, car notes, as well as negligent medical and utility bills that were sold or outsourced to collection agencies. Such data will be used by the credit bureaus in order to generate your credit worthiness on their 300 to 850 numeric credit score scale. Lenders mainly use the credit score itself so as to approve a loan process, so it’s a must to get an understanding what they are seeing that coincides with the data on the credit report.
There may be a lot of questions when it comes to credit score, but one thing we know for sure is that it’s important. How about you, what are your concerns when this subject is being brought up?
Categories: Credit Score Articles Tags: Credit Score, credit score concerns, credit score questions, declined, lenders, lines, order
What does it mean if I was turned down by a credit card due to “sufficient open lines of credit?”?
Question by LC: What does it mean if I was turned down by a credit card due to “sufficient open lines of credit?”?
I applied for a credit card and was turned down due to “sufficient open lines of credit.” Isn’t that a good thing? My credit score is around 809.
I applied for a credit card and was turned down due to “sufficient open lines of credit.” Isn’t that a good thing? My credit score is around 809.
Additional questions: where are you answerers copying these answers from? And what’s your incentive to post duplicate answers?
Best answer:
Answer by dis_orient_ed
You scored low because you have been applying everywhere and your credit has been check to many times in a short period. (It makes your score go down.)
You already have two or three lines of credit from that source. Even though the issuer has different names, it is the same bank.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Categories: Credit Score Questions Tags: Card, Credit, down, lines, mean, Open, sufficient, turned