How many INQUIRIES in a 2 year period is considered too many?

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by unlvgro37, Feb 26, 2008.

  1. unlvgro37

    unlvgro37 Well-Known Member

    I was just reading through some of the threads where people are talking about having 20 or more inquiries which seems crazy to me. How many is considered alot or detrimental to your score?
     
  2. flacorps

    flacorps Well-Known Member

    How many is too many? One more than the creditor you're applying with will tolerate seeing.

    Inquiries fade in significance over their two-year lifetime ... they can cost a lot of points in their youth, not so much in old age.

    But inquiries from known CAs and JDBs indicate collection activity, and look like heck on a manual review, while an automatic review may be programmed to detect them and disqualify the applicant due to "collection activity" shown on the report.
     
  3. bizwiz41

    bizwiz41 Well-Known Member

    Anything more than 2-3 per year is going to start hurting you. An exception is the "shopping inquiries". These are inquiries where you are shopping for credit (say a mortgage or auto loan), and may have several in a short time period. FICO counts these as only "one" inquiry.
     
  4. ccbob

    ccbob Well-Known Member

    I about died when I saw what happens when you apply to those "broker competition" sites (e.g. Lending Tree). In one day after applying, I had something like 10-15 new inquiries across the three bureaus. Basically you're giving permission to each and every lender/broker to pull your credit--and they do. Fortunately, as bizwiz41 says, they group similar inquiries within 30 days together and count them as one loan application when scoring, but it sure looks bad when you look at just the raw listings.
     
  5. flacorps

    flacorps Well-Known Member

    I would say that a good rule of thumb is to space inquiries by at least 90 days ... a key feature of this minimum spacing is that new there will only be one "unseasoned" (less than 6 months old) TL on the report when any application is made.
     
  6. bizwiz41

    bizwiz41 Well-Known Member

    Perhaps to go one step further, remember the addage, "only apply for credit when you need it". It's a basic tenet that will keep yu out of inquiry trouble.
     
  7. flacorps

    flacorps Well-Known Member

    Dig your well before you're thirsty.

    If you can get a card that has no annual fee and it is from an issuer you don't already use ... apply for it if you haven't applied in the last 90 days.

    Lots of credit available and a wide diversity of issuers will keep you from being harmed due to ratejacking and other misdeeds.
     
  8. Hedwig

    Hedwig Well-Known Member

    I agree with flacorps. When you need credit, you may not be able to get it.

    Grab it while you're able. Use it wisely, and when one bank screws you over, start using a product from another bank.
     

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