I don't know how much it will decrease by, but ANY judgement counts against your credit score. And I highly doubt that the dollar amount matters. What is important is whether you are on time with your payments. The number of 30-, 60-, and 90-days-late show up, regardless of who the creditor is. You cannot just decide not to pay a medical bill. You owe the money and if you don't pay it, you're a bad credit risk. Period.
2007-09-25 08:05:58
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answer #1
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answered by equal_opposites 5
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Once a judgment is slapped on your credit report, your FICO score plummets. There isn't an exact way to determine "how" bad it plummets, but for sure, it does. Depending on where you live, judgments can stay on your credit report anywhere from 7-20 years. The longer the judgment, the more your score depletes, the more the debt attached to the judgment, the more it affects your score. Always try to avoid this result, then garnishments, and asset freezing can lead. You feel at a lost when your debt is controlling your living to this extent. I would contact them, and try to resolve it, and attend your court date, if given one. I wish you the best, been there done it, friend!
2007-09-25 08:08:52
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answer #2
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answered by Mookie 5
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You can expect a hit of up to 100 points. Why not settle it out using a 3rd party arbitrator before they add interest, attorney fees, and court costs? I did something similar using www.totaldebtsolutionsllc.com with great success though medical bills and judgments are hit and miss. Good luck.
2007-09-26 03:47:16
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answer #3
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answered by Nicki W 2
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If I understand you wisely, adverse products are being bumped off out of your credit report... leaving much less adverse products than in the previous. If I have been provided that precise, that could recommend your credit status better. and that's the effect of a minimum of three hours of study... so i'm exceptionally particular in this.
2016-10-09 20:08:53
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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I'm confident that you will find many financial clarification at: loandirectory.info-
RE How does a medical bill judgment affect my credit score?
Hello. How does a court judgment for a medical bill count against one's credit score? For instance, for a debt of $10k, if the court decides in the hospital's favor, what will that do to my FICO score? Is there a specific amount the score will decrease by? Is it based on the amount of the debt? Thanks in advance.
Nan
2014-09-03 08:25:04
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It only affects your credit score if it goes to collections. If you lose the court case, then the court will demand that you pay the medical institution. It also gives the institution the power to garnish your wages in case you do not pay. But all in all, it will not affect your credit unless you do not pay.
Hope this helps.
2007-09-25 08:09:06
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answer #6
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answered by E.T. Barton 5
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The dollar amount makes no difference. Judgments show up in the public records section of your report and depending on what your score is made up of now they can cause your score to drop anywhere from 100 to 150 points at first.
Once they get the judgment they can attach bank accounts, garnish wages (if your State allows it) and file liens on any other property you may own like cars, boats, land and homes.
This will stay on your credit for 7-years or until the statute of limitations runs out whichever is longer weather you pay it or not making it very hard to get any other types of loans without making massive down payments, paying huge fees and State maximum interest rates.
2007-09-25 08:13:27
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answer #7
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answered by ? 7
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I agree with Spifiman's answer
2007-09-25 08:53:09
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answer #8
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answered by echo 7
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