Credit Score

Credit Utilization: The Complete Guide to Optimizing Your Ratio

Learn how credit utilization affects your credit score and discover strategies to lower your ratio and boost your score fast.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated December 1, 2024)
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Credit utilization is 30% of your FICO score
  • Keep utilization below 30% (below 10% is ideal)
  • Both individual and total utilization matter
  • Pay before statement date for fastest impact
  • Requesting credit limit increases can help

What Is Credit Utilization?

Credit utilization is the percentage of your available credit that you're currently using. It's calculated by dividing your credit card balances by your credit limits. For example, if you have a $1,000 balance on a card with a $10,000 limit, your utilization is 10%.

30%
of your FICO score is based on amounts owed
Source: myFICO

Credit utilization is one of the most important factors in your credit score, second only to payment history. The good news? Unlike payment history, you can improve your utilization ratio quickly—sometimes within a single billing cycle.

How Credit Utilization Is Calculated

Credit scoring models look at two types of utilization:

Per-Card Utilization

The utilization on each individual credit card. Having one maxed-out card hurts your score even if your other cards have zero balances.

Overall Utilization

Your total credit card balances divided by your total credit limits across all cards. Both matter for your score.

Utilization Example

  • Card 1: $2,000 balance / $5,000 limit = 40%
  • Card 2: $500 balance / $10,000 limit = 5%
  • Card 3: $0 balance / $5,000 limit = 0%
  • Overall: $2,500 / $20,000 = 12.5%

Watch Per-Card Utilization

In the example above, even though overall utilization is 12.5%, Card 1 has 40% utilization. This high per-card utilization can still hurt your score. Aim to keep each card below 30%.

Impact on Your Credit Score

Credit utilization has a significant impact on your FICO score. Here's how different utilization levels typically affect your score:

0-9%
Excellent (optimal)
10-29%
Good
30-49%
Fair
50%+
Poor (hurts score)

Research shows that consumers with the highest credit scores typically have utilization rates in the single digits. However, having 0% utilization (not using credit at all) can also be suboptimal—creditors want to see you actively managing credit responsibly.

What's the Ideal Utilization Rate?

The magic number most experts recommend is keeping your utilization below 30%. However, for the best credit scores, aim for under 10%.

The 1% Rule

Some credit experts suggest keeping at least 1% utilization (a small balance) on your cards rather than 0%. This shows you're actively using credit while maintaining excellent utilization.

How to Lower Your Credit Utilization

  1. Pay Down Existing Balances

    The most direct way to lower utilization is to pay down your credit card balances. Focus on cards with the highest utilization first.

  2. Pay Before Statement Closes

    Your balance is typically reported to credit bureaus on your statement closing date. Pay down your balance before this date to ensure a lower utilization is reported.

  3. Request Credit Limit Increases

    A higher credit limit with the same balance equals lower utilization. Many issuers let you request increases online. Just avoid requests that trigger hard inquiries.

  4. Open a New Credit Card

    A new card increases your total available credit. However, the new account may temporarily lower your score due to the hard inquiry and reduced average age of accounts.

  5. Spread Balances Across Cards

    Rather than maxing out one card, spread purchases across multiple cards to keep per-card utilization low. Balance transfers can help.

  6. Keep Old Accounts Open

    Closing old credit cards reduces your total available credit, which increases utilization. Keep accounts open even if you don't use them.

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Common Mistakes to Avoid

Closing Old Credit Cards

Closing a credit card reduces your available credit, instantly increasing your utilization ratio. If the card has no annual fee, consider keeping it open and using it occasionally.

Only Paying the Minimum

Minimum payments keep your balance high month after month. This maintains high utilization and costs you significant interest. Pay as much as you can each month.

Maxing Out for Rewards

Some people max out cards to earn rewards points, then pay off the balance. But if the high balance gets reported before payment, your score suffers. Time your payments before the statement closing date.

Ignoring Per-Card Utilization

Don't just focus on overall utilization. A single maxed-out card hurts your score even if your total utilization is low.

Balance Reporting Dates

Contact your credit card issuers to learn when they report to the bureaus. It's usually the statement closing date, but it varies. Knowing this date helps you time payments for optimal utilization reporting.

Wrong Credit Limits Hurting Your Score?

Incorrect credit limits on your report artificially inflate your utilization ratio. Our AI identifies these errors and generates dispute letters to fix them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most experts recommend keeping your utilization below 30%. However, those with the highest credit scores typically keep utilization under 10%.
Credit utilization updates when your credit card issuer reports to the bureaus, typically once per month. Lowering your balance can improve your score within 30 days.
Your score updates when the new balance is reported. To see faster results, pay down your balance before your statement closing date.
Yes! Your balance is typically reported on the statement date, before your payment is due. Even if you pay in full, a high statement balance can hurt your score.
Generally no. Closing cards reduces your available credit, increasing your utilization ratio. Keep them open and use them occasionally to prevent closure due to inactivity.

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