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Things That Negatively Affect Your Credit Score

<p>Credit scores are very important&comma; especially if you are in need of a loan to purchase a home or if you are in a situation where you need to refinance in order to pay off your debt&period;  If you do not keep track of your credit score&comma; you can inadvertently harm your financial reputation by decreasing your score and appearing untrustworthy and irresponsible to those who issue loans and lines of credit&period;  It is important to know what your credit score is&comma; but it is also very important to know how your actions can move your credit score up or down&period;  The higher your credit score&comma; the better&comma; so you will want to avoid the following actions which can dramatically decrease your score&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Actions to Avoid<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>In order to keep your credit score high and standing strong&comma; avoid using more than 80&percnt; of your entire credit line&period;  Add up the lines of credit you have with every credit card you own&comma; and determine what 80&percnt; of that amount is&period;  Then&comma; keep your spending in check by always spending less than that amount&period;  This will make financial institutions view you as someone who is responsible about their spending&comma; who will not risk going into debt just to purchase something they want&period;  In addition&comma; it will prevent you from accruing too many expenses that you may potentially be unable to pay off&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Being late on your payments and being unable to pay off entire bills on time will result in a decrease in your credit score&period;  The longer you are unable to pay off your bills properly&comma; the lower your score will go&period;  Not only will you be dealing with high interest rates and late fees that are added onto your current pile of debt&comma; but financial institutions will be unwilling to loan money or provide more credit to an individual who clearly cannot pay off his&sol;her debt&period;  Keeping your spending in check&comma; at about 20-25&percnt; of your entire credit line&comma; will help you take the first step toward decreasing your monthly credit card bills&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;If you are unable to maintain steady employment or are unemployed for a long period of time&comma; your credit score will suffer&period;  Try to find at least steady part-time work&comma; even if it does not pay enough&comma; rather than remain completely unemployed&period;  Financial institutions value customers who are employed&comma; generating an income to pay off their bills&period;  You can also attempt freelance or contract work to at least get temporary short-term or long-term employment under your belt&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;If you are asking for additional credit lines too often&comma; this can lower your credit score&period;  Every time you apply for a new credit card or a loan&comma; the lender or credit card company runs a credit check on you&period;  The more people need to look into your score&comma; the more suspicious you seem&comma; resulting in a lowered overall score&period;  Therefore&comma; avoid asking for additional credit unless absolutely necessary&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h5>Attached Images&colon;<&sol;h5>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li> <span class&equals;"license">License&colon; Creative Commons<&sol;span> <span class&equals;"source">image source<&sol;span><&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>A credit check is an easy way to determine where you stand in the financial world&period;  If your credit score is high&comma; you can apply for more credit or for a loan with confidence&period;  If your credit score is too low&comma; work on adjusting the score by changing the way you spend and pay your bills&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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