Credit Score

Do Utility Bills Affect Your Credit Score?

Learn when utility payments appear on your credit report, how unpaid bills can hurt your score, and how to use utilities to build credit.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated September 20, 2024)
8 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Most utilities don't report on-time payments
  • Unpaid bills sent to collections hurt your credit
  • Experian Boost can add utilities to your Experian report
  • Cell phone contracts sometimes do credit checks
  • Utility deposits may be required with bad credit

When Utility Bills Appear on Your Credit

Utility accounts have an unusual relationship with credit reporting. Understanding when they show up can help you manage your credit better.

What Typically Gets Reported

Utility Reporting Status

  • On-time electric/gas: Not reported
  • On-time water: Not reported
  • Cell phone (contract): Sometimes reported
  • Internet/cable: Usually not reported
  • Unpaid sent to collections: Always reported

The general rule: utility companies report bad news but rarely report good news to credit bureaus. This means paying your bills on time doesn't help your credit, but not paying can hurt it badly.

Cell Phone Contracts

Cell phone carriers are somewhat different:

  • May run a credit check when you sign up
  • Some report payment history to bureaus
  • Device financing (phone payments) is often reported
  • Late payments on financed phones can hurt credit

Device Financing Is Different

If you're financing a phone through your carrier, that's essentially a loan and may be reported to credit bureaus. This is separate from your monthly service charges.

How Unpaid Utility Bills Hurt Credit

When you don't pay a utility bill, here's what typically happens:

  1. Service may be disconnected
  2. Account is sent to collections (often after 30-90 days)
  3. Collection agency reports to credit bureaus
  4. Collection appears on your credit report for 7 years
  5. Score can drop 50-100+ points

Small Amounts Can Cause Big Problems

Even a small unpaid utility bill of $50-100 can end up in collections and severely damage your credit. The size of the debt doesn't affect how much damage it does—a $50 collection hurts almost as much as a $500 one.

Using Utilities to Build Credit

There are now ways to get credit for your utility payments:

Experian Boost

  • Free service from Experian
  • Links to your bank account
  • Adds utility and phone payments to Experian report
  • Can increase your FICO 8 score with Experian
  • Only affects Experian, not Equifax or TransUnion

Other Reporting Services

  • Some rent reporting services also report utilities
  • Credit builder apps may include utility reporting
  • Results vary by scoring model used

Pros

  • Free way to build credit (Experian Boost)
  • Uses bills you're already paying
  • Can help thin credit files
  • Immediate score impact possible

Cons

  • Only affects some credit scores
  • Must link bank account
  • Late payments can hurt if reported
  • May not help with all lenders

Protecting Your Score from Utility Problems

Preventive Measures

  • Set up autopay for utility bills
  • Keep contact info updated with utilities
  • Respond to disconnect notices immediately
  • Request payment plans if struggling
  • Close accounts properly when moving

If a Bill Goes to Collections

  • Verify the debt is actually yours
  • Check if the amount is correct
  • Try negotiating pay-for-delete before paying
  • Get any agreements in writing
  • Dispute any inaccuracies with credit bureaus

When Moving

  • Give proper notice to utility companies
  • Get final bills sent to your new address
  • Pay final balances promptly
  • Update your address with credit bureaus
  • Keep records of account closures

Utility Collection Errors on Your Report?

Wrong amounts, debts you already paid, or utilities that aren't yours—our platform helps identify and dispute utility collection errors.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most utility companies don't report regular on-time payments. However, if you don't pay and your account goes to collections, that will be reported and can significantly hurt your credit score.
Not automatically. You can use Experian Boost (free) to add utility payments to your Experian report, which may increase your FICO 8 score. Regular utility payments don't affect credit otherwise.
Yes. If an unpaid utility bill is sent to collections, that collection account will appear on your credit report and can drop your score by 50-100+ points. It stays for 7 years.
No. Experian Boost only affects your Experian credit report and FICO 8 score from Experian. It doesn't affect your scores at TransUnion or Equifax, or older FICO versions some lenders use.
If it's inaccurate, dispute it with the credit bureaus. If it's accurate, you can try negotiating pay-for-delete with the collector, or wait for it to fall off after 7 years.

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