Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition

“A great credit score can help you finish rich! Liz Pulliam Weston gives solid, easy-to-understand advice about how to improve your credit fast. Read this book and prosper.”   –David Bach, bestselling author of The Automatic Millionaire and The Automatic Millionaire Homeowner   “Excellent book! Insightful, well written, and surprisingly interesting. Liz Pulliam Weston has done an outstanding job demystifying an often intimidating and frustrating topic for the benefit of all consu

Rating: (out of 27 reviews)

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Step by Step system for repairing bad credit fast no matter what your credit situation may be
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5 Comments on “Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition”

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  1. Eric William says:

    Review by Eric William for Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
    Rating:
    This book only restates what the creedit industry wants you to know. It does NOT give you the truth about many aspects of the credit industry that you need to know.

    I am not a lawyer, but I have won cases against the three credit reporting agencies. They paid me over $7,000, and it only required $100 of fees on my part. To do this I needed GOOD information — which I did not get from this book.

    The author Liz Pulliam Weston did not do any hard-nosed investigation to write this book. She has taken the credit industry PR, which is NOT an unbiased source.

    Most other books start with what Weston provides, and then gives you the other story. What people really need to know about your credit score, how it can be harmed, and how you can get the reporting agancies to fix errors.

    With all due respect, please do not buy this book. Look further. There are BETTER books. I suggest you look at the ones written by Privacy Times (a great unbiased book) or any book on credit written by a laywer (there are many on Amazon).

  2. Dennis Littrell says:

    Review by Dennis Littrell for Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
    Rating:
    L.A. Times and MSN Money columnist Liz Pulliam Weston knows money and she knows credit, and in this information-packed, no-nonsense book she gives you just about everything you need to know about that “open sesame,” that shibboleth of numbers, that Holy Grail of liquidity–your credit score!

    First, what is your credit score and why is it important? It’s a three digit number ranging from 150 to 950 (p. 16) that creditors use to determine whether you are a good risk. If it is low, they won’t lend you any money, meaning you can’t buy a car or a boat or a house unless you pay cash; and if it is somewhere in the middle, you’ll pay higher interest rates than those with a higher score.

    Second, how can you find out what your score is? As Weston explains there are three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion that calculate “real” credit scores (either FICO or NextGen). You can contact them over the Net or by phone (Weston gives addresses and phone numbers), but here’s the rub:

    “Congress recently did give US residents the right to get free copies of their credit REPORTS annually from each of the three bureaus. But that doesn’t include the right to free SCORES; the bureaus can and will continue to charge for those.” (p. 25, my emphasis) The point here is that you can get your credit report for free, but they won’t tell you the score!

    So I checked out some Web sites and found out that they wanted me to sign up for their credit monitoring services after which I would get my score, or I could get the score by itself for a flat fee. Since I found out my score a couple of years ago when I refinanced my house, I declined the offer. One thing I didn’t like was having to give out my Social Security number to get the score. As Weston advises, under the heading of “Get Stingy with Your Social Security Number” (p. 108), you should “…keep your number to yourself. If the business insists that it needs the number, you can either do business with someone else or ‘misremember’ a digit or nine to protect your privacy.” Hmm. Never thought of that.

    However the credit bureaus mentioned above are presumably safe, and at any rate for most people there is no other way to get your score. (And of course, “misremembering” won’t work in this case.)

    Third, what information goes into making up your score and how can you improve it? And finally how can you repair damage done to your credit and lift your score high enough to get credit and good interest rates?

    Weston goes into detail answering these questions. She relies on the experience of people who have been there and done that, and upon her personal experience as well as information culled from the many letters and emails she gets from readers. She makes “what makes for” good credit scores crystal clear.

    By the by, it is interesting to note, as Weston does in Chapter 9, “Insurance and Your Credit Score,” that bad credit can affect what you pay for insurance as well as what you pay for credit. She writes, “Insurers…believe credit is an excellent predictor of whether you’ll file a claim–better, in fact, than almost any other factor, including your previous driving history.” (p. 130) So what we have are credit-based insurance scores for all kinds of insurance, auto, home, health, etc. What insurers have discovered is that there is a strong correlation between low credit scores and high risk (for them). Although correlation is not causality, and does not in a scientific sense constitute proof, the insurance companies will tell you that they make money from those with high credit scores and lose money (through claims) from those with low credit scores. Weston even has some stats on pages 132-133 attesting to this fact.

    Why the correlation? I think most people would say (and Weston makes this most reasonable surmise) that people who are careless with their money are likely to be careless in other aspects of their lives as well.

    One more thing: you can get a fair idea of how credit worthy the credit people think you are by the amount of junk mail you receive offering to lend you money! I have a pretty good score and I must get fifty to a hundred offers a year. And of course I have no need to borrow; but isn’t it always the case: those who least need credit are the ones who can most easily get it, and those who need it the most are the ones least likely to get it! Life is an eternal Catch-22.

    By the way, another annoying Catch-22 of the corporate world is revealed by Weston as she quotes “Glen” whose insurance costs increased because his wife max’ed out her GAP card. He calls a number and is told that his credit is scored “according to how the insurance company wants” it to be scored. He is then told that the insurance company “can’t discuss the criteria [because] it’s proprietary”! Ah, yes, the old proprietary dodge.

    Anyway, in this age of identify theft and other kinds of information fraud, this book belongs on the syllabus for Personal Finance 101, an ongoing, real-world, absolutely required course for all of us living in the postmodern age.

  3. Jeffrey Compton says:

    Review by Jeffrey Compton for Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
    Rating:
    I picked up this book at the Airport, read it on the plane and then immediately ran my FICO – which was a very sorry 521! Using Weston’s advice I was able to get to a much more respectable 680 and rising (over a nine-month period)! For the price, it is a much better guide than those kits (including Suzy’s) offered on the Internet.

  4. Liz S. says:

    Review by Liz S. for Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
    Rating:
    I picked this book up because I will be writing an in-depth review of it for a website. I spend a lot of time reading about credit scoring, analyzing it and talking to people about it. I might as well just save my time and hand them this book because it does a far better job debunking myths and explaining good and bad practices than I ever could.

    She gives excellent background on the credit scoring industry and an outline of approximately how much each of the major categories affect your score (payment history, etc). Since the formulas are proprietary and there are so many of them, no one can say, “Hey, you just applied for 3 credit cards. That’ll cost you 15 points!” The fact is that different activities will have different results for different individuals. Factor in the multiple credit scores and multiple revisions of each of those scores and you have yourself a complicated topic to cover.

    One of the things I really liked about it is that she definitely approached it from the credit score improvement end rather than the personal finance end. Many times, they mesh perfectly, but sometimes, there is a difference. The specific example I’m thinking of in the book: always pay down your highest-interest debt first. Well, from a personal finance perspective, this is great advice. From a credit scoring perspective, the best approach is to pay down credit lines that are close to their limits since that will take a big hit on your score. I’m glad to see someone finally make the distinction.

    Overall, an excellent book with the right approach to improving your credit.

  5. Midwest Book Review says:

    Review by Midwest Book Review for Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
    Rating:
    One of the most critically important aspects of sound financial planning is the establishment and maintenance of a sound credit rating. But sometimes “things happen” that result in damage to a credit rating. In Your Credit Score: How To Fix, Improve, And Protect the 3-Digit Number That Shapes Your Financial Future, personal finance journalist Liz Pulliam Weston provides the reader with a complete and accessible plan for improving a credit score that has been damaged through error, neglect, or debt load. Readers will learn what a FICO score is and why it’s so important to their financial well being both short term and long term. Readers will learn how to lighten debt loads, cut credit card rates, review their credit history, improve their credit rating, save money, and employ a credit rating to their best personal and professional advantage. No personal or community library Money/Finance Management reference collection can be considered comprehensive or up-to-date without the inclusion of Liz Weston’s Your Credit Score!

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