1 / 1

Can an Auto Refinance Hurt your Credit Score?

Everyone’s credit situation is unique, but in general, the short answer is: your credit score may go down slightly at first, but could improve long-term. Visit: https://www.outsidefinancial.com

Download Presentation

Can an Auto Refinance Hurt your Credit Score?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Can an Auto Refinance Hurt your Credit Score? Everyone’s credit situation is unique, but in general, the short answer is: your credit score may go down slightly at first, but could improve long-term. About Your Credit Score To understand why, it’s helpful to know what goes into your credit score. There are many different score models, and each lender chooses its own – and lenders often use different ones depending on the type of collateral. [Sidebar: Collateral is any property that secures a loan. When you get an auto loan, your car is the collateral.] For all credit score models, though, there are certain factors that always matter. Your payment history is one. If you’ve been paying off your debts on time each month, lenders make the assumption that you’ll keep it up. How long you’ve been paying off those debts (“credit age”) also matters: six years of paying bills tells a lender more information than six months. A smaller factor is how much additional credit you want, measured by “hard” inquiries. When a lender requests your credit report and score from one of the credit bureaus, it’s known as a credit inquiry. Hard inquiries will be noted on your credit report and could decrease your score by a few points. That’s because shopping for too much credit at one time could indicate a problem. BUT that same logic doesn’t apply to rate-shopping for one car loan. Lenders know that it’s smart to compare offers, so there’s no penalty for multiple hard inquiries for the same type of loan in a short period of time. FICO considers all inquiries related to auto loans within a 45-day period as a single credit inquiry. Soft pulls don’t affect your credit, and they aren’t recorded on your credit report. When you apply to be pre-qualified for a car loan online through Outside Financial, we do a soft pull of your credit on Experian. That helps us to determine whether we can match you with one of the lenders on our platform. You’ll see the auto interest rates that you’re pre-qualified for, without affecting your credit. How Does this Impact your Ability for a Car Refinance? Pulling that together, getting a car refinance online (or offline) could reduce your score a little because your new loan will be newer than your old loan, so the average age of your debt will go down, and the hard inquiry from a lender can make it go down by another few points. Longer-term, though, if your new loan is a better fit for you and you’re able to make your car payments on time each month, the improvement in your credit score will be much greater.

More Related