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Credit Score: What It Is, Score Ranges, and How to Improve Yours

A credit score is a three-digit number (typically 300–850) that summarizes your creditworthiness based on your borrowing history. Lenders use it to decide whether to approve you for loans, credit cards, and mortgages — and at what interest rate.

Your credit score directly affects how much you pay to borrow money. A higher score means lower rates, which can save tens of thousands of dollars over a mortgage or auto loan. It also influences rental applications, insurance premiums, and sometimes employment decisions. Few three-digit numbers have this much financial impact on your life.

Credit Score Ranges

Score RangeRatingWhat It Means
800–850ExceptionalBest rates available; easy approvals across all products
740–799Very GoodNear-best rates; strong borrowing position
670–739GoodCompetitive rates; approved for most products
580–669FairSubprime rates; limited options; higher deposits
300–579PoorFrequent denials; very high rates if approved

What Determines Your Credit Score

The two dominant scoring models — FICO and VantageScore — weigh factors slightly differently, but the core inputs are the same. Here’s the FICO breakdown, which is used by roughly 90% of top lenders:

FactorWeightWhat It Measures
Payment history35%Whether you pay bills on time — the single biggest factor
Credit utilization30%How much of your available credit you’re using (lower is better)
Length of credit history15%Age of your oldest account, newest account, and average age
Credit mix10%Variety of account types (credit cards, installment loans, mortgage)
New credit inquiries10%Number of recent hard inquiries and new accounts opened
Analyst’s Note
Payment history and utilization together account for 65% of your FICO score. If you want to move the needle fast, focus there first: never miss a payment, and keep your credit card balances below 30% of your limits — ideally under 10%.

How to Improve Your Credit Score

Pay every bill on time. Set up autopay for at least the minimum payment on every account. A single 30-day late payment can drop your score 50–100 points and stays on your report for seven years.

Reduce credit utilization. Pay down credit card balances or request credit limit increases (without increasing spending). Utilization is calculated monthly, so improvements here show up fast — often within one billing cycle.

Keep old accounts open. Closing your oldest credit card shortens your credit history and reduces total available credit (raising utilization). If the card has no annual fee, keep it open and use it occasionally.

Limit hard inquiries. Each credit application triggers a hard inquiry. Space out applications and avoid opening multiple new accounts in a short window. Rate shopping for a mortgage or auto loan within a 14–45 day window counts as a single inquiry.

Check your credit report for errors. Dispute inaccuracies with the bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). You’re entitled to free reports at AnnualCreditReport.com. Errors are more common than people realize.

Credit Score vs. Credit Report

Your credit report is the detailed record of your borrowing history — account balances, payment records, inquiries, public records. Your credit score is the numerical summary derived from that report. Think of the report as the full exam and the score as the grade. If you disagree with the grade, you need to review (and potentially dispute) the underlying report.

FICO vs. VantageScore

FICO and VantageScore are competing scoring models. Both use the same underlying credit report data but weight it differently. FICO dominates in mortgage lending and most major credit decisions. VantageScore is common in free credit monitoring tools and is gaining traction with some lenders. Your scores from each model may differ by 20–40 points — that’s normal and doesn’t mean one is wrong.

Common Misconception
Checking your own credit score is a “soft inquiry” and does not lower your score. Check it as often as you want. Only applications for new credit trigger hard inquiries that can temporarily affect your score.

Key Takeaways

  • Credit scores range from 300–850. A score of 740+ typically unlocks the best interest rates.
  • Payment history (35%) and credit utilization (30%) are the two most powerful score factors.
  • Improving your score means paying on time, keeping balances low, and maintaining a long credit history.
  • Check your credit report regularly — errors are common and correcting them can boost your score quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good credit score to buy a house?

Conventional mortgages typically require a minimum score of 620, but a 740+ score gets you the best rates. FHA loans allow scores as low as 580 with a 3.5% down payment. Every 20-point improvement can meaningfully lower your mortgage rate and save thousands over the loan’s life.

How long does it take to build a credit score?

You need at least one account open for six months and reported to the bureaus to generate a FICO score. Building a “good” score (670+) typically takes 1–2 years of responsible credit use. Getting to 800+ usually requires a longer history with multiple account types.

Does income affect my credit score?

No. Income, employment, savings, and investments are not factored into credit scores. A high earner who misses payments will have a lower score than a modest earner who pays consistently. Scores measure how you manage credit, not how much you earn.

How does the debt-to-income ratio relate to my credit score?

Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is not a credit score factor — it doesn’t appear on your credit report. However, lenders evaluate both your score and your DTI when making lending decisions, especially for mortgages. A strong score with a high DTI can still result in a denial.