| |
Cancel a card, hurt your credit score |
|
|
|
Older credit is better
If you do cancel a card, you can compound your error even further
by canceling the card that you've had the longest period of time
and on which you've been making regular payments. By canceling an
old card, the length of your credit history on open accounts will
grow shorter. Both the FICO score and the VantageScore
credit-scoring formulas take into account the credit histories of
even closed accounts in assessing how long you've been managing
credit. However, according to Watts, "that history will finally
disappear from the formula when a credit bureau of its own accord
removes old credit account information from your credit file."
Barrett Burns, CEO and president of VantageScore Solutions (the company formed by the credit bureaus Equifax, Experian and TransUnion), agrees, but cautions that the scoring algorithm "is weighted such that if you maintain that older account, you're better off because it goes to a pattern of payment history." Nevertheless, he says, if it's an older account that you don't use, and you're paying fees on it, "you're probably better off closing it out for privacy rather than credit score reasons."
There's at least one more nuance to consider, Hendricks explains. If you're intent on canceling a card, cancel a younger card or cancel one on which the credit card issuer doesn't report the credit card limit. "Some credit card companies don't report your credit limit," he says. "You can find out which ones by getting a copy of your credit report."
Number of cards matters
Your credit report may also alert you to another reason to cancel
a credit card: You can have too many credit cards. Though there
is no magic number -- again, because each person's credit situation
is so different -- your credit report does give so-called reason
codes for your credit score.
There are more than 40 reason codes -- reasons to
grant or deny credit -- and up to four are given with your credit
report to show what factors affected your score. The most common
reason codes, according to Equifax, are as follows.
 |
Most common reasons consumers are denied
credit: |
 |
|
|
|
One of the reason codes (reason No. 4) tells you if
having too many cards has hurt your score. Common sense should tell
you that the older you are and the better you manage your credit,
the more cards you can have in your wallet before you reach the
magic number that triggers the reason code (though you may be surprised
to learn that 10 or more cards is not too high in some cases). "In
any event, if you're in that rare category and have plenty of credit
and low balances on the other cards, canceling a card may help you,"
Hendricks says.
Though canceling a card probably will not increase your credit score, holding on to one has a number of advantages. For one, Fair Isaac and VantageScore look for a healthy credit mix, a mix that might include a mortgage loan, a car loan, maybe a store card or two, three or four MasterCard or Visa cards and a home equity line of credit, or HELOC, for example.
|