The highest credit score one can achieve is the magical FICO number of 850, which is a perfect score and the person that achieves this will find themselves being offered every form of financing and loan product imaginable. The highest scores usually range in the area of 720-850. This range is considered to be excellent credit. Anything above a 700 score is considered good. The goal of 700 or higher is key when looking for the best benefits of having an exceptional record. It is important to understand what these numbers are, how they are determined, and of course, how to improve them.
FICO stands for Fair Issac Corporation, the firm that created the formula for achieving the optimum score. The FICO score is based on the spending and bill paying habits of an individual and their overall debt loads. Nearly every financial decision and transaction is recorded and used to make up the highest credit scores one could hope for. All financial transactions are reported to one or all three nationally recognized reporting agency bureaus. Having the highest score from one agency doesn't necessarily mean that a person will have the same score from another agency. Most lenders and creditors average out the highest numbers from each agency.
The reporting bureaus make money from sharing these numbers with lenders, banks, creditors, etc. The way a FICO highest credit score is broken down is simple. Thirty five percent is attributed to having a record of paying bills on time, thirty percent for total balance on credit cards and other loans compared to total credit limit, 15% for length of history, 10% for new accounts or recent applications for financing, and 10% mix of credit cards and loans. The highest credit scores will result in an individual having a lower balance to limit ratio and a balance of revolving accounts with installment loan accounts.
Improving ones record is a matter of lowering balances on debts, stopping frequent history inquiries, paying all bills on time, and having a longer history (not closing accounts, even when they are no longer needed).
2007-06-06 10:05:47
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answer #1
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answered by CupCake 5
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The limit on a new card will be based entirely on your creditworthiness. Depending on how much history you have, you may or may even qualify for another credit card. About a third of your score is based on the ratio of credit card debt to limit. Carrying balances of more than 30% of your limit, hurts your score. Pay down the debt and your score rebounds. So if you are carrying high balances on existing credit cards, getting a new card will increase your overall limit which should lower yoru debt percentage. If you don't carry large balances on other cards, the additional limit won't really improve your score. What will improve your score is good payment history on several open lines of credit. You really need at least 24 months of consistent, on time payment history to improve your score.
2016-05-18 04:49:11
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answer #2
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answered by kathaleen 3
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It contingents on the Agency because all of them use various models. The maximum FICO score is 850. The maximum VantageScore is 990.
2014-08-25 11:21:45
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Highest FICO score is 850 - hardly anybody has that. If you're current on payments on the car, wouldn't affect your score much.
2007-06-06 10:07:17
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answer #4
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answered by Judy 7
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Not much can be added to cupcake's answer. 850 is the top number.
2007-06-06 10:19:25
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answer #5
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answered by Tom J 3
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its hard to say, but u know it will go down a lot and it will take longer to go up
2007-06-06 10:40:45
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answer #6
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answered by shorty21 5
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Once you leave the top you NEVER return. You can get back to about 830 though.
2007-06-06 10:07:05
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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