Credit Scores: How Credit Age is Calculated

Credit Scores: How Credit Age is Calculated

Helpful active and passive strategies to improve your credit age.

Exactly how your credit score is calculated may seem complex — and maybe even mysterious. But when you break it down into smaller (and less complicated) pieces, it can help remove the mystery, which can enhance your ability to build and maintain a solid score.

What is Credit Age?

Let’s tackle credit age, which is one of the factors used to calculate your credit score – used by everyone from lenders to landlords to help determine your creditworthiness. The VantageScore model takes the length of time you have had credit (aka credit age or depth of credit) into consideration when formulating your score.

Unpacking Credit Age for VantageScore

Credit age makes up 21% of VantageScore.*

How Credit Age is Calculated

According to VantageScore:

  • Depth of credit looks at the age of your open or active credit accounts, plus the average, oldest, and youngest account ages.
  • Older accounts tend to help boost a VantageScore because they offer more insight into how you manage your finances over time.

If you opened a credit card five years ago, you would have a longer credit age (or a thicker credit file) than someone with a credit card for only a year.

Other Considerations

The depth of credit category, notes VantageScore Solutions, also considers the type of credit accounts a person maintains. The two main credit types are:

  • Revolving (such as credit card accounts)
  • Installment debt (a car payment or mortgage)

Demonstrating that you can handle both types of credit is likely to bump up your score, according to VantageScore Solutions, more than just having a single type of credit on your reports.

How to Improve Credit Age

In many cases, the longer you have had credit, the better. This means that younger people with no credit card accounts or other types of credit can find it challenging to wait for their credit age to mature, so to speak.

Patience as a Strategy

Credit age is one of the few areas where doing less can improve your score. Patience isn’t passive — it’s strategic restraint that allows your profile to strengthen naturally over time. Each month that passes, without opening new unnecessary accounts or closing old accounts:

  • Your average age of credit increases
  • Your credit profile gains stability
  • Your risk profile decreases in a lender’s view

Patience has a compounding effect on your credit age. Credit scoring rewards stability, longevity, and consistency. These are all patience-driven attributes.

Become an Authorized User

If you have younger credit, joining an established account can boost your score. Often, parents add their children or a spouse adds their partner as an “authorized user” on an older credit card account to help give them a longer credit history. If this is something you’re considering, it’s important to:

  • Make sure that the account holder checks with the issuer to confirm credit usage is being reported to the three major credit scoring bureaus: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion.
  • If the card issuer does not report to the bureaus, becoming an authorized user on that card defeats the purpose and won’t help you improve your credit age.

Apply for a Secured Credit Card

Fortunately, a variety of lenders now offer what’s known as a secured credit card account to those with little or no credit to help them build up their file so they can eventually qualify for better rates on loans and other credit products.

How to Get a Secured Card. To obtain a secured credit card:

  • Deposit money with the issuing institution as collateral.
  • Once you get the card, use it at least once a month and then pay it off in full every month.
  • This is where patience comes into play again. By following this plan consistently, in 18 or 24 months, you should be able to transfer to a traditional credit card.

Don’t Close Old Accounts

Closing an old account can hurt your credit score. Older accounts are the foundation of credit age, so closing an old account deletes all the credit age and history you’ve built. If that older account has an annual fee that you don’t want to pay anymore, there is a way to maintain credit age without a fee.

  • Annual Fee. If you are paying an annual fee and want options:
    • Call your credit card company, card issuer, or financial institution
    • Explain that you’ve been a long-time customer and want to maintain the credit history built, but don’t want to pay an annual fee.
    • Ask about the options available to remain a customer. You may be able move to a different card with a lower fee or no fee at all.
    • And remember, the answer is always no if you don’t ask!

With reporting by Casandra Andrews

*based on VantageScore 3.0

Jean Chatzky

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