Before Buying A Home, Look At Your Credit Score
REM # F671
By Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: A prospective home buyer is wondering how to handle their credit limit before applying for a mortgage. Ilyce discusses the best way to handle credit limits and balances when trying to have a high credit score. She also explains why it is important to pull your credit score before applying for a mortgage.
Q: I am planning to apply for a home mortgage loan. I currently have a credit
limit of $10,000 on a credit card with a $1,000 balance.
I am going to pay off the balance in full before applying for the mortgage. I have heard that having that much available credit does not look good to a lender. Is there a proper way to lower the credit limit on the card without it hurting my credit score?
A: You don’t want to limit the amount of credit on your card. What you
want to do is manage the credit limit you have.
Right now, you have a $10,000 credit limit and a $1,000 balance. Basically you're
using up 10 percent of your available credit limit. That will have a positive
effect on your credit history.
However, if you lower the amount of your credit limit, you'll be using a higher
percentage as your balance. That may have a negative affect on your credit score.
I don't think most lenders will care about your $1,000 balance (although I think
it's a good idea to pay that off before you apply for your mortgage), and having
a $10,000 limit isn't overwhelming.
Lenders start to get concerned when someone has 5 to 10 credit cards, and each
card has $10,000 to $50,000 of available credit. That would give someone as
much as $50,000 to $500,000 of available credit if every card was maxed out.
Unless your income is $1 million a year or more, having $500,000 of available
credit seems to be excessive.
But having $10,000 of available credit on one card seems reasonable. If you're
concerned, you can talk to a local mortgage lender to see how it would affect
their decision to approve your loan.
A final thought: before you apply for your mortgage, be sure to pull a free
copy of your credit score from annualcreditreport.com. At the time you do this,
you'll be offered the opportunity to pay for a credit score. At $6.95, it's
a good deal because you'll really see how the way you are currently managing
your debt is being perceived.
NOTE: This column is distributed by Real Estate Matters Syndicate, PO Box 366, Glencoe, Illinois, 60022. This column may not be resold, reprinted, resyndicated or redistributed without written permission from the publisher.
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