Business & Finance Personal Finance

Differences in Credit Score Between Bureaus

    Input

    • Credit bureaus only know what creditors report. A single creditor such as a car finance company or a credit card issuer can be very diligent and report information monthly to the bureaus. Creditors can also be less than perfect about reporting information. In such instances a balance due amount could be different between each report. Also, not all creditors report to all three bureaus. Subscribing to a credit bureau is a service the creditor pays to receive. As such a small creditor may only subscribe to one or two of the three bureaus. Differences between the three different reports will reflect the absence of information.

    Due Dilligence

    • Credit bureaus are obligated by law to update and maintain credit histories. It is impossible, however, for the bureaus to be 100% accurate and diligent when managing millions of records. When a credit report item expires or is eliminated by the subscribing creditor there is a chance that the item is not removed from the report. Credit bureaus are allowed to report civil judgments for seven years. If one of the three bureaus, however, fails to remove the judgment entry on a report, it will be different from the other two reports that had the item removed.

      It’s important for borrower’s to occasionally check their credit reports to ensure all information is accurate and up to date. Again, the FCRA demands credit bureaus verify information is correct or remove it from the borrower’s report.

    Different Policies

    • Although the FCRA regulates how credit bureaus manage the information on a borrower’s report, all three bureaus have different policies regarding what is reported. As such the final FICO scores from each bureau can vary by several points.

    Different Scales

    • There are competing credit scoring systems such as VantageScore, which arrive at different numbers than FICO. A borrower should not only know the various scores attached to a credit bureau report but also what are considered high (good credit risk) and low (poor credit risk) numbers. Different companies use different scales. A 700 score on a bureau report can mean different results depending on the different scoring systems. For example, Experian grades credit on a scale of 330-830, while Equifax and TransUnion use scales of 300-850. VantageScore uses a scale of 501-990.

Related posts "Business & Finance : Personal Finance"

Child Insurance and Online Quotes

Personal Finance

Can I Recover Bounced Check Fees?

Personal Finance

List of Top Individual Retirement Plans

Personal Finance

How to Sell Dental Gold

Personal Finance

Minimum Distribution Rules in an Inherited IRA After Death

Personal Finance

How to Calculate Roth Phase Out Limits

Personal Finance

The Punishment for Not Paying Child Support

Personal Finance

Budgeting for 20-Somethings

Personal Finance

How to File a Fraud Report

Personal Finance

Leave a Comment