How long for score to go up after paying all off?

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by geekpipe, Nov 12, 2007.

  1. geekpipe

    geekpipe Well-Known Member

    Ok so had 4 cc's with a balance total of 9500. Credit limit was 11300. Paid everything to ZERO (YAY!) My question is how long before I see an update and also how long before the credit score updates. Any idea how many points I could see increased?

    Thanks Kevin
     
  2. Oracle

    Oracle Banned

    You'll probably get hosed in the short term because your usage is now zero.

    Best to maintain a small balance, say 10% to 15% of credit limit.
     
  3. geekpipe

    geekpipe Well-Known Member

    wow

    should i put a few $$$ on there before next update?
     
  4. greg1045

    greg1045 Well-Known Member

    Keep it active, a tank of gas here and there, a pizza, small purchases, and pay it off when the statement comes.
     
  5. geekpipe

    geekpipe Well-Known Member

    ok but any way to figure approximate score increase? i mean thats the whole point :)
     
  6. amyfico911

    amyfico911 Banned

    What you do is Have The credit card companies fax/send you a letter stating your current balance as $0.00

    then MAIL the letters and a letter from yourself asking to have the account updated within 72hours. And they will do it :)

    ..........the only other solution is to have it Rapid Rescored and thats a 24 hour turn around.

    Hopefully this hepls you, If you just let it cycle and do nothing it takes anywhere from 2weeks - 90 days to update :(
     
  7. Hedwig

    Hedwig Well-Known Member

    Why do you need the increase immediately? Are you in the process of applying for a mortgage or car loan? If not, I'd just let it update through the normal process.

    If you don't need credit right now, don't get fixated on the score and how soon it updates.
     
  8. apexcrsrv

    apexcrsrv Well-Known Member

    You will see a significant score increase as soon as the reports update the zero balance. My guess would be 40 to 50 points given you utilization both overall and individually.

    There is no hard data that keeping a small percentage on the cards is beneficial. Moreover, it makes no sense to pay interest on it. In terms of usage, I'd use each card once per each three months if you don't want to revolve a balance and again, there is no reason to.
     

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