Isn't it ironic that in order to build credit you must first build debt?
I used to have excellent credit. In my early twenties I had enough available credit on several credit cards to buy a new Trans Am if I wanted to. Things were going really well. Then about four years ago my employment status went sour and for quite a while I was barely scraping by: cash advancing credit cards to pay rent, ended up late on a few credit card payments, etc. We moved up here to D.C. a year and a half ago and have been doing fine ever since.
My credit rating, however, is still recovering. Last year I applied for the first new credit card I had in years... it ended up being a Capital One card with a $200 limit even though I was then making $40k a year. Though part of me took this as a grave insult, I kept my chin up and said it was only temporary.
Sure enough, after a few months I started getting better and better pre-approved offers in the mail. Then I bought my new Toyota and didn't have any problems getting approved for financing through Toyota Financial Services. The interest rate is pretty high, granted, but I was approved no questions asked. My next credit card had a $1000 limit, the next one after that $1500, now I'm getting pre-approved offers for $5000 again.
Now our plan is to buy a house. We're getting married in May of next year so the house purchase will be sometime around July of 2005. I have until then to get back into the good graces of creditors.
The ultimate irony is the only way to do that is to max out credit cards, pay everything on time, and then make sure they are fully paid off before we apply for the loan. So in order to achieve that end, last month we did some refinancing and ended up with some surplus cash. I bought her the ring and spent an additional $3000-ish on misc. car parts, junk for the house (DVD burner, video capture card, new top-of-the-line Norelco beard trimmer, lawn furniture), and stuff for the garage. How ironic it is that today I have quite a bit more debt than I did three months ago... yet once I pay this all off (should be by December) my credit rating will skyrocket.
The only way to build credit is to use credit. You spend a lot of money, show the banks that you're heavily in debt, then mysteriously pay it all off, showing them that you can easily handle large balances without flinching.
Weird, eh?
Yeah, so that's how I justified that new DVD burner, Jenn's rear suspension package, my line lock, her boost/fuel pressure gauges, my video capture card, the SLP manual fan switches, all the other junk... ;)
I used to have excellent credit. In my early twenties I had enough available credit on several credit cards to buy a new Trans Am if I wanted to. Things were going really well. Then about four years ago my employment status went sour and for quite a while I was barely scraping by: cash advancing credit cards to pay rent, ended up late on a few credit card payments, etc. We moved up here to D.C. a year and a half ago and have been doing fine ever since.
My credit rating, however, is still recovering. Last year I applied for the first new credit card I had in years... it ended up being a Capital One card with a $200 limit even though I was then making $40k a year. Though part of me took this as a grave insult, I kept my chin up and said it was only temporary.
Sure enough, after a few months I started getting better and better pre-approved offers in the mail. Then I bought my new Toyota and didn't have any problems getting approved for financing through Toyota Financial Services. The interest rate is pretty high, granted, but I was approved no questions asked. My next credit card had a $1000 limit, the next one after that $1500, now I'm getting pre-approved offers for $5000 again.
Now our plan is to buy a house. We're getting married in May of next year so the house purchase will be sometime around July of 2005. I have until then to get back into the good graces of creditors.
The ultimate irony is the only way to do that is to max out credit cards, pay everything on time, and then make sure they are fully paid off before we apply for the loan. So in order to achieve that end, last month we did some refinancing and ended up with some surplus cash. I bought her the ring and spent an additional $3000-ish on misc. car parts, junk for the house (DVD burner, video capture card, new top-of-the-line Norelco beard trimmer, lawn furniture), and stuff for the garage. How ironic it is that today I have quite a bit more debt than I did three months ago... yet once I pay this all off (should be by December) my credit rating will skyrocket.
The only way to build credit is to use credit. You spend a lot of money, show the banks that you're heavily in debt, then mysteriously pay it all off, showing them that you can easily handle large balances without flinching.
Weird, eh?
Yeah, so that's how I justified that new DVD burner, Jenn's rear suspension package, my line lock, her boost/fuel pressure gauges, my video capture card, the SLP manual fan switches, all the other junk... ;)
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