Credit Score

15 Credit Score Myths Debunked: What Actually Affects Your Score

Separate fact from fiction with our comprehensive guide to credit score myths. Learn what really affects your score and what doesn't matter at all.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated July 15, 2024)
12 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Checking your own score never hurts it
  • Income is not a credit score factor
  • You don't need to carry a balance
  • Closing old cards can hurt your score
  • Married couples don't share scores

Credit score myths are everywhere—and believing them can cost you money or prevent you from building credit effectively. Let's separate fact from fiction.

Myths About Checking Your Score

Myth 1: Checking Your Score Lowers It

FALSE. This is the most common credit myth. Checking your own credit score or credit report is a "soft inquiry" that has zero effect on your score. Check daily if you want.

Hard inquiries—from credit applications—do affect your score slightly (usually 5-10 points) and temporarily. But checking your own score is always free and harmless.

Myth 2: Each Hard Inquiry Drops Your Score Significantly

MOSTLY FALSE. A single hard inquiry typically affects your score by less than 5 points and often has no effect at all. The impact fades quickly and inquiries fall off after 2 years.

Multiple inquiries for the same loan type (mortgage, auto) within 14-45 days are treated as one inquiry for scoring purposes.

Check Your Credit Freely

You're entitled to free credit reports from each bureau annually at AnnualCreditReport.com. Many banks and credit cards also offer free score monitoring. Use these without worry.

Myths About Income and Employment

Myth 3: Higher Income = Higher Credit Score

FALSE. Credit scores don't consider income at all. Someone earning $30,000 can have an 800 score while someone earning $300,000 can have a 500 score. Scores measure credit management, not earning potential.

Myth 4: Being Unemployed Hurts Your Score

FALSE. Employment status isn't a credit score factor. Losing your job doesn't directly affect your score. However, if unemployment leads to missed payments, those will hurt your score.

Myth 5: Your Job Title Affects Your Score

FALSE. Credit bureaus don't care if you're a CEO or entry-level employee. Your profession, employer, and job history aren't scoring factors.

What Actually Affects Your Credit Score

  • Payment history: 35%
  • Amounts owed: 30%
  • Credit history length: 15%
  • Credit mix: 10%
  • New credit: 10%

What Doesn't Affect Your Score

Income, salary, employment status, job title, bank account balances, and personal factors like age, race, religion, or gender are NOT credit scoring factors.

Myths About Debt and Payments

Myth 6: You Need to Carry a Balance to Build Credit

FALSE. This expensive myth benefits credit card companies, not you. You build credit by having accounts open and making payments—not by paying interest. Pay your balance in full monthly.

Myth 7: Paying Off Collections Immediately Boosts Your Score

MOSTLY FALSE. Under older scoring models (FICO 8 and below), a paid collection hurts your score almost as much as unpaid. Newer models (FICO 9, VantageScore 3.0+) ignore paid collections, but most lenders still use older models.

Myth 8: All Debt Is Equal for Your Score

FALSE. Credit card debt (revolving) is weighted much more heavily than installment debt (mortgages, auto loans). High credit card utilization hurts far more than a large mortgage balance.

Myth 9: Settling Debt Is the Same as Paying in Full

FALSE. Settled accounts are marked differently than paid accounts. "Settled for less than full amount" is a negative status. It's better than unpaid, but not as good as paying in full.

The Balance Myth Costs You Money

Carrying a balance doesn't help your credit—it just costs you interest. Credit utilization is based on your statement balance, not whether you carry it month-to-month. Pay in full and save money.

Myths About Accounts and Age

Myth 10: Closing Old Cards Helps Your Score

FALSE. Closing old credit cards can hurt your score in two ways: it reduces your total available credit (raising utilization) and eventually removes account history. Keep old cards open, even if unused.

Myth 11: Closing a Card Removes Its History

PARTIALLY TRUE. Closed accounts in good standing stay on your report for 10 years. However, once removed, that history no longer helps your score. Closed accounts with negative history remain for 7 years.

Myth 12: You Only Need One Credit Card

PARTIALLY FALSE. Having multiple accounts demonstrates you can manage various credit types. Most high scorers have several cards. However, quality matters more than quantity—don't open cards just to have more.

Other Common Myths

Myth 13: Married Couples Share a Credit Score

FALSE. Each person has their own credit score, even after marriage. Joint accounts appear on both reports, but you don't "inherit" your spouse's score. Each person's score is calculated independently.

Myth 14: Debit Card Use Builds Credit

FALSE. Debit cards aren't credit products—they're linked to your bank account. Using a debit card has zero effect on your credit score because it's not reported to credit bureaus.

Myth 15: You Have One Credit Score

FALSE. You have dozens of credit scores. FICO alone has multiple versions, plus there's VantageScore. Each scoring model weights factors slightly differently. The score you see may not be the same one a lender uses.

Focus on Fundamentals

Despite the myths, building credit is straightforward: pay on time (every time), keep utilization low, don't close old accounts, and limit new applications. Everything else is noise.

Know What's Actually on Your Credit Report

Understanding the facts is the first step. Our platform helps you identify and dispute actual errors that could be hurting your score.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Checking your own credit score is a 'soft inquiry' and has zero effect on your score. Check as often as you want. Only hard inquiries from credit applications affect your score.
No. Credit scores don't consider income, employment status, job title, or salary. Scores only measure how you manage credit, not how much you earn.
No. This is a costly myth. You build credit by having accounts and making on-time payments. Paying in full each month is actually better because it keeps utilization low.
Usually not. Closing a card reduces available credit (increasing utilization) and eventually removes that account's positive history. Keep old cards open, even if unused.
Not directly. Each person has individual credit scores. However, joint accounts appear on both reports, and a spouse's poor management of joint accounts affects both scores.

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