About Your Free Experian Credit Report
Your credit report can change daily, which can raise or lower
your credit score when you need it most. So let Credit Manager
help make staying on top of changes to your credit report
easy! Credit Manager will:
* Scan your Experian Credit Report for changes every day
* Alert you by email when key changes are found so you're the
first to know
* Allow you unlimited access to your score and report with
your full membership
* Track the progress of your credit score with monthly score
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Try Credit Manager now and receive a free Experian Credit
Report and Score with your 30-day trial. Take control of your
credit starting with Credit Manager today!
About Experian North America
With approximately 30 years of experience and more than 30,000
clients in North America, Experian combines our unsurpassed
data with the knowledge, expertise and creativity to help
companies build successful relationships with their customers.
Experian also provides U.S. consumers with the tools and
services to help them understand, manage and protect their
personal credit profiles.
About Credit Scores
A credit score is a numerical index which represents an
estimate of an individual's financial creditworthiness. It is
based on a subset of the information in an individual's credit
report. Lenders, such as banks and credit card companies, use
credit scores to determine credit limits and interest rates.
The best-known credit score in the United States is the FICO
score calculated using mathematical formulae developed by the
Fair Isaac Corporation. The three major American credit-report
agencies (Equifax, Experian and Trans Union) all use
variations on this scoring formula under different names, the
best-known of which are the Beacon score and the Emperica
score.
FICO scores and its variants are designed to measure the risk
of default, by taking into account various weighted factors:
* 35% punctuality of payment in the past
* 30% capacity used, i.e., ratio of current revolving debt
(e.g. credit card balances) to total available revolving
credit (e.g. credit limits)
* 15% length of credit history
* 10% types of credits used (installment, revolving)
* 10% amounts of credits obtained in the recent past
The above percentages are approximate. Current income and
employment history do not influence the FICO score.
There are other special factors which can weigh on the FICO
score. One is that any monies owed because of a court
judgement, tax lien, or similar carry an extra negative
penalty, especially when recent. Having above a certain number
of consumer finance company credit accounts also carries a
negative weight (critics say that this causes a vicious cycle,
locking people into continuing to use consumer finance
companies). The number of recent credit checks also can weigh
down the score, although the credit agencies allow for credit
checks made within a certain window of time to not aggregate,
so as to allow the consumer to shop around.
FICO scores range from about 300 to 850 and exhibit a
left-skewed distribution with a median around 725. A score
above 720 is considered to be "good credit," and a score below
600 is considered to be poor.
In September 2004, a Texas utility company began setting
individualized electricity prices based on credit score.
As a result of the FACT Act (Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act), free reports will be phased in during a
nine-month period, rolling from the West Coast to the East
beginning December 1, 2004. Beginning September 1, 2005, free
reports will be accessible to all Americans, regardless of
where they live.
Recently, some of the agencies which generate credit scores
have also been generating insurance scores, which insurance
companies then use to rate the quality of potential customers.
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