Are Credit Problems Cured by the Passage of Time?
20 December 2004, revised June 24, 2005, Reviewed July 17, 2009
"My credit record is terrible. I have been advised that if I just wait
long enough and don't run up any more debts in the meantime, my terrible
record will cure itself. Is this true? "
It is only partly true. You have to assist father time or he can't help
you.
Credit Scores Will Not Improve Without Help From You
It is true that the force of negative information on your credit score
declines as it ages, but this won't do you any good unless you now
generate positive information. Old bad stuff plus recent good stuff
generates a rising credit score. Old bad stuff followed by no credit
activity results in a continued low score. This is a feature of all
credit scoring systems.
The Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act Limits How Long Negative
Information Stays on Your Credit Record
The Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act puts father time on your side by
setting limits on how long negative information can appear in consumer
credit records. Once a piece of information has been on a consumer's
record for the prescribed period, it is supposed to drop off. Once off,
it will no longer affect your credit score.
The prescribed periods are as follows: inquiries about you from credit
grantors, 2 years; late payments, mortgage foreclosure, collection
accounts and chapter 13 bankruptcy, 7 years; and chapter 7 bankruptcy,
10 years. Tax liens are on for 7 years from the date they are paid, but
if they are not paid they remain on your report indefinitely.
The three major credit-reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian and Trans
Union) have built purge routines into their data systems, but I have no
idea how reliable the systems are. I am not even sure that all three
follow exactly the same purge rules.
I found that on collection accounts, two of the companies purge 7 years
after the date of the original missed payment, but the third purges 7
years from the date of the last activity! This means that the collection
account of a borrower who pays it off after 6 years stays on the books
of the third company for 13 years instead of 7!
It is a good idea for consumers who have adverse information on their
credit records not to rely wholly on the purge policies of the three
companies. Monitor them by periodically requesting your credit report.
And if you happen to have a collection account, pay it as soon as
possible, because the clock may not start ticking until you do.
But I repeat, getting rid of all the bad stuff, by itself, does not give
you a good credit score. To get a good score, your record must include
evidence of payments made on time. If you don't take on any new debt,
you are not generating such evidence.
"Years ago I had terrible credit habits and was chronically late on my
credit cards, but for the last 5 years I have been out of debt. Will I
be able to get a mortgage?"
It will be difficult.
Debtaholics on the Wagon Are Viewed as Poor Risks
Lenders are not interested in lending to debtaholics who have stopped
all borrowing. A debtaholic who has not borrowed for a long period
following a credit binge, during which time all the bad stuff fell off
his credit report, is viewed as a bad credit risk. Lenders view a loan
to such a consumer as akin to offering a drink to an alcoholic who has
been on the wagon.
Is debtaholicism an incurable disease, like alcoholism, where complete
abstinence is the only satisfactory way to cope? Or can debtaholics
learn to use credit responsibly? I am inclined to believe that some of
them can, but lenders will put the burden of proof on the borrower to
demonstrate it.
To do that, you must establish new relationships with credit grantors
who are prepared to deal with people who have bad credit histories. They
are a tough lot: you will pay a high rate, you will be kept on a short
leash, and when you fall behind in your payments, you will be badgered
in every legal way, and sometimes beyond. This is the only way for them
to make money lending to a population that includes a sizeable number of
incurable debtaholics.
While these firms catch a lot of flak from community organizations who
object to the way they treat borrowers, the firms perform an important
public service: they give ex-debtaholics a second chance when no one
else will. If you pay them on time every month, they won't badger you at
all, and your credit score will gradually rise. In time, you can
graduate from the class of deadbeats and enjoy the better terms
available to borrowers who have demonstrated that they can handle credit
wisely.