Another mortgage application could hurt credit
score
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| By Dana Dratch
Bankrate.com |
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Merely asking for credit can make your credit score
drop. So what happens if your mortgage preapproval evaporates and
you have to shop all over again?
In most cases, a second round of mortgage shopping shouldn't affect you, says Craig Watts, public affairs manager at Fair Isaac Corp., the company whose FICO score and other scoring formulas are most widely used in the mortgage industry.
However, if you're on the edge between prime and subprime (usually around 630 with the most common FICO model and about 700 for the VantageScore), then even a few points makes a difference.
Here's how it works: Every time you ask to be considered
for a loan and a lender pulls your credit report, that creates an
"inquiry" on your credit record. Each inquiry lowers your
credit score "an average of less than 5 points," says
Watts. In some cases, though, inquiries don't affect your score
at all.
Make all your mortgage inquiries within a 45-day window
and all your applications should be bundled as one inquiry on your
credit report. In addition, any inquiries made in the 30 days before
your application aren't included, says Watts.
With VantageScore, which has scores ranging from 501 to 990 and is being tested by a number of lenders, that bundling window is 14 days, says Maxine Sweet, vice president of public education for Experian, one of the three major credit reporting companies.
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Loan inquiries could lower credit score
more than 5 points: |
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If you have a very short credit
history and there is little information in your file.
In that case, inquiries could have a disproportionate
effect on your score. |
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"If you have a great deal of recent delinquencies" on your report, Watts says. That signals creditors that you're already having trouble meeting your current obligations. |
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If a lender uses an old version
of the credit reporting software that only allows a 14-day
window to shop mortgages and have all inquiries count
as one. The result: an extra inquiry and possibly a few
more points gone from your score. |
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But, says Watts, "unless a person is on the cusp
of qualifying for the right deal, an inquiry is not likely to be
a deterring factor."
Two other questions to consider:
- What happens if your lender goes bankrupt or changes underwriting
standards after you get your preapproval?
- What can your seller do if
a change kills your loan?
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