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Your Credit Report: Check It Out!
Dollar Sensei
Dollar Sensei

Having good credit is vital to your financial health. You can actually give yourself an annual check-up by reviewing your own credit report. Find out what your creditors are saying about you, what your payment history says about you, and whether you need to take steps to improve your financial health.

If you’ve borrowed money for college, a car, credit cards or other things, you have a credit report. And every year, you’re entitled to one free report from each of three credit reporting agencies: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.

What's in your credit report?
Dollar Sensei Why is the information in your credit report important?
Dollar Sensei What to look for in your credit report?
Dollar Sensei What should you do with the information in your credit report?

What’s in it

  • Personal information: your Social Security Number, employer, address and date of birth
  • Credit information: credit limits, balances, payment history and amounts owed
  • Public record information: whether you’ve been sued, have tax liens or owe late child support payments

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Why it’s important

To build your financial future
Your credit report generates a credit score – the better your history, the higher your score. Things that might lower your credit score are:

  • Late payments
  • Default
  • Bankruptcy

With a lower credit score, you’ll:

  • Have trouble getting more credit cards, renting an apartment, buying a car or house
  • Pay higher interest than other people because of what’s seen as a “risky” borrowing history

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What to look for
Review your report for these key pieces of information:

  • Accuracy -- In the accounts listed, amounts owed and the payment activity
  • Marks against you -- Late payments, bankruptcies, and loan defaults all count ‘against’ your credit score
  • Debt load -- You may find that you need to reduce your overall debt to improve your credit score
  • Length of time – Most negative reporting stays on your report for seven years but should be removed after that

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What to do with the information
The good news is that, even if your report shows you need to work on your credit history, you can improve it:

  • Always make on-time payments
  • Pay off your balances whenever you can
  • Review paid accounts, you may benefit from closing an account

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