|
What Is Your Credit Rating Now?
If you have any charge accounts now, or have ever borrowed from
the bank to buy a car, or if you are paying on a mortgage, there
is credit information on you. Up until a few years ago, you could
only guess at what your credit rating was, because the credit bureaus
who keep track of borrowers wouldn't tell the borrowers anything!
But that's been changed through several laws, and now the bureaus
have to send you your credit file when you request it. If you've
been denied credit on the basis of their record, they will send
you a copy of that record without charge, if you request it within
30 days of the credit denial. If you haven't been denied credit
but just want to know what your file says, you must pay a small
fee to find out.
Why You Really Must Get Your Credit Report?
It is well worth your trouble to obtain your report. You may well
find (because thousands do) that there is a piece of misinformation
that is injuring you without your knowing it, which you can straighten
out by submitting copies of documentary proof (never mail originals
of anything important - it may get lost in the mail) of bills paid,
payments made, etc.
What To Do If You Are "Unlisted"
If, for one reason or another, you are not listed, or they have
insufficient information on you to "rate" your suitability
for credit, you must take steps to correct this.
What To Do If You're New in Town
If you have no record because you hold no cards and have no charge
accounts, or because you have just come in from out-of-town, then
you'd better start assembling one. It may sound a little ridiculous,
but nobody will lend money to someone's who's always paid cash!
You have to have borrowed money or run up charges and paid them
back to be able to borrow larger sums as time goes along.
Start with the local merchants in your immediate area, the ones
that already know you. Even if you don't need it right now, ask
them if you can set up a charge account with them. In most cases
they'll be glad to oblige you, they already know you're local, and
that you patronize them regularly. When you get the credit, charge
a few items each week, and pay your account promptly when presented.
In this way, you'll build up a good credit record with these merchants
in a short time. Do you know your credit rating? If not, get a free
copy of your credit report now - click
here.
Get Your Bank In on the Act
Go to the bank where you keep your checking account, and ask to
borrow a nominal sum (say $500), which they are unlikely to refuse
you. Do this even if you don't need the money, because you do need
the repayment record on their books. Repay the loan on a regular
basis when due. Do not accelerate, and pay it all back the next
month. Strangely enough the banks do not like that, because to them
that indicates a "feast or famine" situation, rather than
a steady payer. The interest cost on this loan, even if you have
no need for the money, will be well worth paying to build up your
credit record. Besides, you can minimize this interest cost by depositing
the money you have borrowed (assuming you do not immediately need
it), in a savings account, and collecting the interest, which will
defray a good part of the cost of the interest you are paying.
Once these charge accounts and the loan have been operating for
a while, proceed to stage two, and ask a large local department
store for a charge account. Most likely they will be happy to give
you their charge card. Build up your rating with them by occasional
purchases and prompt payment, and then you proceed to stage three,
and apply for the less selective national credit cards, Master Card
and Visa, which you should a this point be able to get without too
much difficulty. Click here for a complete list of credit cards.
On the Road
Once you have national bank credit, it's easy to get credit from
all the oil companies, which makes traveling around a cash-free
pleasure. Some gas stations take national cards like Master Card,
but most only take their own credit cards, so you should not overlook
these, just because you already have others.
First Class With No Cash
Once you have all the other cards, a paid-up loan or two, and a
fine record of promptly paying your bills, you may be able to get
the most selective cards of all, the "travel and entertainment"
cards. These are American Express, Diners' Club and Carte Blanche.
These cards operate on a different system than ordinary retail store
cards, or the national bank cards, both of which are revolving credit
plans on which you pay a small amount each month, until your balance
is all paid up. The store or bank hopes you take a long time to
pay, because they make their money on the 1 1/2% monthly (which
is 18% yearly!) finance and, or interest charges.
The T&E cards, however, expect you to pay your bills at the
end of the month! Let your account get 60 days or more delinquent,
and they'll cancel you out as fast as a flash of lightning. Although
these cards do not charge interest, they do charge you a fee for
membership. Click here to sign up for premium credit cards. If you
have bad credit - you can re-establish your credit and apply for
guaranteed approval credit cards.
Let Me Entertain You
So how do you get these marvelous bits of plastic that open up
the doors of exotic nightspots in Tangiers as easily as your nearby
Howard Johnson's? Your good credit record, that you have already
established, will be the most help. Since the T&E people want
you to pay your bills promptly each month, they want to know that
you have a steady record of paying bills promptly to other people.
So first American Express, or Carte Blanche, or Diners' Club, looks
at your credit record. Then at your salary or other income. Most
of them have cut-off points below which they will not grant their
cards. But even if you earn more than their minimum requirements,
they don't automatically okay you for their credit. They look at
your stability! How do they measure stability? How long have you
worked on your present job? If you don't have a minimum of two years
of steady work in one place, they may not consider you at all. How
long have you lived at your present address? At your previous address?
And do you rent an apartment which means you could move tomorrow,
or do you own your own house, which means you will probably still
be in the same place next year. How stable is your livelihood? Do
people in your field of work get laid off frequently?
Now You Can Really Start to Live!
Once you have all the major national credit cards in your wallet,
you can live like the millionaires do, even though you haven't yet
become one. You can go into a fancy store, or even call them on
the telephone, and order those wonderful luxuries which make life
so much more exciting, like furs and diamonds, for your loved one,
or new furniture or appliances for your living room, bedroom or
kitchen. All of this can come true in the wonderful world of credit.
Now in today's world you can charge almost anything on a credit
card, from admission to a nudist camp in Yugoslavia, to medical
care at a hospital in Atlanta, university courses in New York City,
funerals in Los Angeles, and even the services of legal prostitutes
in Las Vegas.
Erasing the Bad Marks
But what do you do if you haven't been able to pay your bills promptly,
or you've run up more than you can handle, or you don't have a very
stable work history? Do you have to give up the dreams of credit-card
living? Not entirely!
Once you find out which credit conditions in your background are
the most troublesome (from the credit report you have already sent
for), you then start to create new conditions that you can then
base your records on. Click here to get a free copy of your credit
report online. If you were out of work, perhaps you can get a reference
from someone you know who owns a business and is willing to say
that you worked for him, if the credit card company checks your
references. If your bills are too high, and you've missed a few
payments, perhaps you should see one of the free consumer-counseling
services that are springing up in the larger cities which will enable
you to consolidate your debts into a manageable amount. Remember
that credit card companies don't care very much about the amount
you owe, but they care a lot about whether you pay steadily, every
single month, even if the amount each month is small, and the entire
debt will take years to pay off!
Don't overlook ways to establish good credit without buying anything!
For example, you have telephone service in your own name, you have
a record of paying bills to them which is then part of your credit
record. The same for your gas and electric supplies from you local
public utilities. These services, when they are in your name, will
show prospective merchants that you do have a record of paying bills,
even if you haven't yet established retail store or bank credit.
Click here for more self-help reports on how to build your credit
rating and more.
Using Your Credit to Save Cash!
The world of credit has one more trick you should know about, this
one that actually saves you money right on the spot. All you have
to do is carry your credit cards with you when you go out shopping,
even if you intend to pay by cash. Then you have to keep an eye
open for the smaller, personal service-type shops, where the boss
himself, or one of the partners, is always present (you'll see why
in a minute). As you walk in, check out the decals on the door to
see which credit cards they accept. Then select your purchase in
the way you normally would - taking your usual care to be sure you're
getting the right item at the right price. When the deal's all set,
produce your credit card (one of those you know he takes), and say
"I'd like to charge it, please!" At this, the merchant's
face will probably drop about six feet, but he'll take your card
and walk over to the imprinting machine (or maybe to the telephone
to check your credit status). He hasn't got much choice, he has
to take your card if he uses their decal in the window. But the
point is, he hates to, because he has to pay the credit card company
a percentage of the sale, usually somewhere between 6% and 10%.
Now, while he's vulnerable, is the time to hit him with a casually
dropped remark like "say, how about knocking 5% off the price,
and I'll pay cash instead?" The chances are he'll accept your
offer, because it saves him the other part of the credit card company
percentage, and because it saves him bookkeeping chores, and waiting
from 3 to 7 days for his money to be credited to him by the credit
card company.
The reason why this gimmick doesn't work in big stores is that
the clerk doesn't give a damn what it costs the boss, and has no
authority to take an additional percentage off the price, so he'll
just go ahead and write up your credit card invoice.
|