Get Mortgage Quotes
New Articles - Oct '09
- When you're behind on mortgage payments
- Removing negative items from your credit report
- Mortgage advice for first-time home buyers
- The truth about free credit reports
- What is an interest rate cap on ARM loans?
- When do lenders check my credit score?
- Tax credit program may be extended soon
- Refinancing help for upside down mortgages
- What FICO score is needed these days?
- How to compare home loan offers
- Mortgage rejection and how you can avoid it
- Getting the best deal on a mortgage loan
- How to purchase your first house in 10 steps
- Beginner's guide to buying real estate
Mortgage & Credit >> About Your Credit >> How's Your Credit?
Home Buying 101 - How's Your Credit?
by Brandon Cornett
Continuing in the home buying process, you need to take a good, hard look at your credit situation. Try to do this a few months before beginning your home search to prevent delays later on.
You can start by ordering copies of your credit report.
Credit reports are maintained by three credit agencies: Experian, Equifax and TransUnion. These agencies maintain any and all information pertaining to your personal credit - payment habits (including late payments), bankruptcy and other issues.
Your credit score is based on the information in your credit reports, which come from the three aforementioned agencies. Three agencies, three reports, three credit scores ... all about you!
Get copies of your credit reports from all three agencies and review your scores. Fair Isaac's - the organization that actually converts your credit reports into credit scores - has a website where you can order all three credit reports at once: www.MyFICO.com. Here's a quote from the home page of that website:
"FICO scores are your credit rating. Most lenders base approval on them. You have three FICO scores, one for each credit bureau, and you can only get all three from myFICO."
The MyFICO website also explains how to interpret your credit score, what the score means to lenders, and what you can do to improve your score. Don't be surprised if you find an error. It happens from time to time. To correct an error, contact the reporting agency directly.
And don't delay - it may take several months to completely correct the error and remove it from your report.
Brandon Cornett is the editor of HomeBuyingInstitute.com, one of the Internet's largest and most respected libraries of home buying information. Put hundreds of home buying strategies at your fingertips by visiting www.HomeBuyingInstitute.com.


