4 (Perfectly Legal) Hacks to Improve Your Credit Score

How to easily or quickly increase your credit score.

ByABC News
March 26, 2014, 4:16 PM
There's no need to pay a credit doctor to boost your credit score.
There's no need to pay a credit doctor to boost your credit score.
graytln/Getty Images

March 26, 2014— -- If you want to use credit or get a loan someday, you should work on raising your credit score. It can take a while to earn a good credit standing, and for the most part, that's how the game is played: with patience and good behavior.

But there are a few tricks to make it easier or faster to increase your credit score.

First a few things on credit scores: They're important, and you should aim to have a good one, but you shouldn't obsess over the numbers. Fluctuations are normal, but keeping tabs on your score will help you make good financial decisions. Watching your score could even help you spot identity theft, because an unexpected score drop could indicate someone is misusing your information.

Keeping track of your score is easy, but make sure you're comparing the same score from month to month. There are free services like Credit.com that provide monthly access to your scores and help in creating a credit game plan you can execute.

Once you know what your score is, you can make a plan to improve it.

1. Use the Buddy System

If you have no credit or can't get a credit card on your own, explore the option of becoming an authorized user on a credit card. What you do is ask a primary cardholder, like a family member or significant other, if you can get an authorized card in your name on their account. Keep in mind that some scoring systems may give less weight to authorized user accounts than they do to primary accounts, but you would still stand to benefit from them.

While this can be a great way to add payment history to your credit file, it can be a delicate, high-stakes strategy. First, the primary cardholder must be willing to add you to his or her account, and even though this person can be anyone, you should only tie your credit to someone you deeply trust.

This is especially important for the primary cardholder. If you add an authorized user to your credit card account, and that user runs up a huge bill, you're held accountable for it, and your credit score will be affected by the high debt levels or missed payments.

Adding your child as an authorized user on your account can help them build credit from a young age. In fact, the authorized user gets credit for the whole account history, not just the point from which they're added to it. Not only does that establish a credit history, it increases the average age of accounts on your credit report, which is also an important factor in credit scoring.

Primary cardholders should keep in mind that their actions will affect that user. You don't want to trash your kid's credit by adding them as an authorized user to an account that's maxed out or delinquent.

2. Pay Often

To get a great credit score, you should use as little of your available credit as possible — many experts recommend keeping your credit utilization lower than 30%, and 10% is even better.

That's a huge bummer if your only credit card has something like a $500 limit. Even if you can afford to use more than 30% (or all) of your available credit, you shouldn't, in order to protect your credit score.

If you want to use your credit card a lot but don't want to hurt your credit utilization rate, consider making multiple account payments each billing cycle. You won't know when the credit card company will report your balance to the credit reporting agencies, so paying quickly and often will keep your reported balance very low.