Snapping up department store credit cards or skipping out on that parking ticket could send your credit score tumbling.
By David Ellis, CNNMoney.com staff writer
The concept is simple: a bad credit rating means higher interest rates and ultimately less savings for you.
Your credit score, or your FICO score, ranges from the worst possible score of a 300 to a perfect 850, and is determined by such factors as paying your bills on-time, the amount of money you owe as well as the length of your credit history, according to the company Fair Isaac, which runs the scoring system.
But even if you are one of those individuals who is diligent about maintaining your good credit standing, it is still possible that with a few simple missteps you could send your credit score into a tailspin faster than you can say delinquency.
So while closing out those credit card accounts you don't use or rolling over all your outstanding debt to one card may seem like sensible moves, you might actually be killing your credit rating.
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So while closing out those credit card accounts you don't use or rolling over all your outstanding debt to one card may seem like sensible moves, you might actually be killing your credit rating.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 Next