credit repair for myself

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by ernest65, May 9, 2009.

  1. ernest65

    ernest65 New Member

    I need help guys. I recently applied for an increase on my sears card and

    was denied. I checked my credit score and found out that my score had

    gone from 612 to 545. I can not understand why this happened. I have

    credit cards but I have not used them in quite a long time and are all current.

    I have two cards that showed up as 30 days past due with sears and capital

    one, but as of right now all are current and am getting ready to pay all of

    them off this week. I want to know how I can at least raise my score

    back to what it was. I signed up with Lexington 2 yrs ago but did not see any

    change in my report. Would it be in my best intrest to close some of these

    accounts or to leave them open once i pay them off? Any advice you can

    offer will be greatly appreciated. Thanks
     
  2. jjgross

    jjgross Well-Known Member

    While your cards may be current now,both sears and capitol one have long memories.You could try a goodwill letter to them both.But in this time I wouldn't count on any increases,and if you pay them off there's a good chance of them being closed.
     
  3. ccbob

    ccbob Well-Known Member

    Sounds like a new collection showed up.

    If you were denied credit, you have the right to request a free credit report. I would do that first to see what's going on.
     
  4. JoshuaHeckathorn

    JoshuaHeckathorn Administrator

    cbob's right. Request your free credit report and then come back to us with what you've found. We have a lot of great people here who are willing to help you navigate what they've gone through before.

    Don't close the accounts just yet, and as JJ said, if you pay them off completely they may close them on you anyway. So, be patient until you've figured out exactly what's driving your score down.
     
  5. sawa0018

    sawa0018 Active Member

    agreed. don't do anythign out of emotion until you have all the facts.
     

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