Credit Score Reason Codes: What They Mean and Why You Should Care

While knowing your credit score is important, understanding the context of where your score resides within the overall score range, and having insight into why itโ€™s not higher, empowers you to focus on score improvement strategies that will help you successfully increase your credit score and gain access to better credit termsโ€”which ultimately saves you money.

When a credit score is generated, there are a series of credit related questions being asked by the scoring model, and the answers for each question will depend on the information (or data) being reported in your credit report. Points for each answer to each question are assigned and the sum of these points is generated to create your credit score.

Letโ€™s take a look at the made up example scorecard below and the associated scores for Jane and Bob.  The information highlighted in blue represents the points assigned for each credit question based on information reported in their credit reports:

After the score is calculated, score reason codes are generated along with the score โ€“ both of which are provided to the lender who requested the credit report. If the lender denies the request for credit, they will often incorporate these reason codes into the adverse action letter they are obligated to provide to you in order to help explain why the credit request was denied.  These reason codes are also frequently included within the score explanation section when you purchase access to your personal credit report and score.

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These reason codes indicate the main reasons why your credit score was not higher and are returned with the score in order of importanceโ€“with the first code indicating where the consumer lost the most points, or the primary reason why the score wasnโ€™t higher, the second being the secondary reason, and so on.

Now, letโ€™s calculate the top reasons why Bobโ€™s score wasnโ€™t higher.  We do this by simply subtracting the total number of points Bob received from the maximum number of points available for each โ€œquestionโ€ in the scorecard:

These are then sorted in order of impact of where the greatest number of points were lost.  For Bob, the following credit score and score reason codes would be returned as:

Bobโ€™s Credit Score = 50

Top reasons why Bobโ€™s score was not higher:

  • Time since most recent missed payment too recent
  • Too many new accounts recently opened
  • Too many accounts with a balance

With this information, Bob is able to understand what credit behaviors had the most substantial impact on his score and where he needs to currently focus his efforts in order to improve his score.

[Related Article: The Politics of the Credit Score]

Up to four reason codes are returned with each score generated by the credit reporting agency.  In some cases, a fifth reason code is provided, but only if the # of credit inquiries is a factor that affected your scoreโ€”but was not already in the top four reasons.  Even people with really high scoresโ€”say a 790 or higherโ€”may return reason codes with their score. This simply represents areas where the high scoring person just missed earning the maximum number of points available for that particular data element.

Now that weโ€™ve determined Bobโ€™s reason codes, how many reason codes would Janeโ€™s score produce? Know the answer?  Share them in the comments section below.

Image by Stewf, via Flickr

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