Introduction
Credit score (300-850) determines life in the USA — renting, car loans, credit cards, mortgages, insurance. Without a credit score, you are invisible to the financial system. Reaching 700+ in 6-12 months is achievable.
What is a Credit Score
- 300-579: Poor — everything is more expensive
- 580-669: Fair — cards with high APR
- 670-739: Good — most products
- 740-799: Very Good — best rates
- 800-850: Exceptional
- Goal: 700+ in 12 months
Three Credit Bureaus
- Experian, TransUnion, Equifax — collect data independently
- Score may vary between bureaus
- Landlords usually check one
FICO vs VantageScore
- FICO — used by 90% of lenders
- VantageScore — shown by Credit Karma
- FICO matters for important decisions (mortgage)
What Builds a Credit Score
- 35% Payment history — do you pay on time
- 30% Credit utilization — % of limit (goal: below 30%, ideally below 10%)
- 15% Length of history — average account age
- 10% Credit mix — diversity
- 10% New inquiries
Building Plan from Scratch
Step 1: SSN/ITIN + Bank Account
- Obtain an SSN (if eligible to work) or ITIN
- Open an account (PSFCU/Chase)
- A bank account alone does not build credit, but it is the foundation
Step 2: Secured Credit Card
- Card with a deposit (200-500 USD); limit = deposit
- Best options:
- Discover it Secured — 0 USD fees, 2% cashback, conversion to unsecured after 7 months.
- Capital One Platinum Secured — deposit 49-200 USD
- PSFCU Secured Visa — for members
- Use for small purchases (Netflix, phone)
- Pay in full every month
- After 6-7 months — score 650-700+
Step 3: Petal / Capital One
- Petal 2 Card — uses Cash Score, no history required; limit 500-10k
- Capital One QuicksilverOne — "Fair" credit
- These cards report from day one
Step 4: Self Lender
- Credit builder loan — 25-150 USD/month for 12-24 months.
- Money held in a deposit; you get it back
- Builds an "installment loan" (diversity)
Step 5: Experian Boost
- Free: phone, electricity, internet, Netflix bills count towards history (through Experian)
- experian.com/boost
- Average +13 points instantly
Step 6: Authorized User
- Spouse/parent with an older card adds you as an AU
- The history of that card appears on your report
What Harms Your Score
- Late payment (30+ days) — -50 to -100 points; visible for 7 years
- High utilization (>30%) — temporary drop
- Closing the oldest card — shortens history
- Hard inquiries too frequently
- Collections — -100 to -150 points; 7 years
- Bankruptcy — -200 to -300 points; 7-10 years
What Does NOT Affect Your Score
- Income, savings in the account
- Employment status
- Age, race, nationality
- Rent (unless the landlord reports)
Checking Your Report
- annualcreditreport.com — free weekly from 3 bureaus
- Credit Karma — TransUnion + Equifax + alerts
- Credit Sesame
- Your bank/card — often shows FICO
Realistic Timeline
- Month 1: Secured + Self → score 580 (new history)
- Month 3: first reported → score 620
- Month 6: 6 months of history → score 680-700
- Month 12: "real" card (Chase, Amex) → score 720-740
- Month 24: auto loan, mortgage → score 750+
Common Mistakes
- Waiting to "build credit" — without an active card, nothing happens
- Paying the minimum — interest 20-30% APR
- Not using the card — it gets closed by the issuer
- High utilization in one month — keep below 10% on reporting day
- Closing the first secured — losing the oldest line
- Applying for many cards at once — hard inquiries
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