If you pay the full balance on your credit card each month do you still…?
Question by dk: If you pay the full balance on your credit card each month do you still…?
If you pay the full balance on your credit card each month, does this help to build up good credit history or score?
Best answer:
Answer by message_board_ceo
You can’t pay off debt if you don’t have debt. According to FICO, the most effective way to raise your score is to pay debt. Chase, Discover, and MBNA (now BofFA) all confirmed this by advising me to charge a small amount and paying it ALMOST entirely (leaving a small $ 3-5 balance). This would show I was an extremely low credit risk, thereby boosting my FICO score.
So I tried this method using 3 sock drawer cards, each with a credit line in excess of $ 10k. I would buy a tank or two of gas, small grocery purchases, etc. under $ 100 on each per month, then pay off 95% of the balance. My score shot up from the low 700’s to 755 in a matter of 3-4 months. Mind you I had very little outstanding debt on any of my other cards. Don’t believe me? Try it, because it most definitely will improve your score.
One more thing, keeping a card with $ 0 balance, not using it for extensive periods of time used to be a good thing but is a big NO NO these days. Why? Because creditors are very freaked out by unconsumed lines of credit that are potential sitting ducks for turning into delinquent accounts. Furthermore, unused cards are having their credit lines slashed substantially, thereby reducing your available credit, which is a major factor in FICO’s score. Expect your score to take a nosedive when Chase or Amex decides to cut your unused 10k credit line in half because you didn’t even need $ 5k, so why should they give you $ 10k?
What do you think? Answer below!