| Bad credit hurts in many ways |
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| The fear is that credit problems
at home create tension and distraction at work, Lynch says. "If you are their
employee, will you be getting phone calls from collectors at work? Will the employer
have to garnish your wages?" she asks.
Housing Rental
property owners may reject tenant applications with poor credit scores, something
only 48 percent of consumers know, says the CFA. Utilities Only
30 percent of the Americans that CFA surveyed know that utilities, too, care about
credit scores. Even slow credit indications are enough to slap you with a $500
deposit before the telephone company connects your line or the electric company
turns on the juice, says Lynch. Cell
phones These providers increasingly rely on credit scores to sort the
good risks from the bad credit. And bad credit definitely doesn't get the sweetest
deals at Verizon. Instead of contract plans that offer more minutes for your dollar
and come with a wider selection of phones, those who don't make the cut must consider
pay-as-you-go phones. Elective medical
procedures When Lynch looked into laser eye surgery, the doctor immediately
pulled her credit score to see if she qualified for his monthly payment plan.
Otherwise, the bill is due in full at the counter. "They're not denying you
service, and if it were a mandatory treatment, this would never come up,"
she says. Wolf has seen the same situation at orthodontist offices. School
loans When Judge John C. Ninfo II, chief judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Western District of New York, made a documentary as part of his
"get out of debt now" program for high schoolers, he included the sad
story of a Nazareth College of Rochester student who was turned down for a law
school student loan because of his FICO score. He isn't alone.
Lynch, too, has watched families' dreams burst when their scores disqualified
them from university and federally funded loans. And in this case, it isn't a
matter of sucking it up and paying a higher interest rate. "It's black and
white. You get financing or you don't," she says. "Not furthering your
education is a far-reaching consequence." Marriage More
than half (52 percent) of CFA survey respondents think a married couple has a
combined credit score. Nope. You can't marry your way out of a bad FICO rating,
and many times a disparity between partners causes too much tension for the marriage
to survive, says Brette McWhorter Sember, author of "The Complete Credit
Repair Kit." She personally knows several couples who skipped the church
aisle over it. "If the owner spouse dies, the home and
mortgage become part of the estate. If the surviving spouse wants to take over
the mortgage, he or she needs to qualify for credit," says Sember. "Most
people bank on the fact that they'll live to pay off the mortgage so this isn't
a concern." Unfortunately, Wolf adds, more and more
Americans are becoming acquainted with these uses of credit scores the hard way.
"People who need the loans typically are paying the higher payments. It's
a Catch-22. Once they get bad credit, it is difficult to overcome with these bills,"
she says.
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