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Don't give up, there's help for your credit score
http://www.financemeter.net/articles/14621/1/Dont-give-up-theres-help-for-your-credit-score/Page1.html
Stuart Hunter
Providing credit repair services since 1991, Lexington Law has helped over 500,000 clients legally take on their credit. Last year alone, Lexington Law helped clients remove over 600,000 negative items from their credit reports. 
By Stuart Hunter
Published on 09/18/2009
 
Many people don't realize that their credit reports are a problem until it's too late. Some give up hope, but others start seeking out credit help and learn there are a number of things people can do to fix their credit scores.

Don't give up, there's help for your credit score
Many people don't realize that their credit score is a problem until it's too late. They are sitting down in the car salesman's office or talking with a loan officer waiting to hear whether they will be able to get approved for a loan so they can drive home in a new car or start making preparations to move into a new home. And then they get the news. Their credit rating is either too low to qualify for financing at all or high enough to get a loan, but the interest rate is so high they are no longer able to afford the new purchase they had set their hearts on.

Even when people know what their credit score is, they may be caught off guard when they find out how much higher their credit score needs to be today compared to just a few years ago. To get approved for a new home loan with the lowest interest rates and best terms, consumers need to have at least a 750 credit score. A credit score in the low 600's used to mean higher interest rates but now days it could result in a flat out denial of credit.

It is uncomfortable to find out you have a low credit score in such a fashion and cause for many people to lose hope. What can you do when the damaging information in your credit reports can stay there for 7 years or more?

It is unfortunate that there are some who stay in this state of hopelessness because those who start searching for help with their credit find out there are plenty of things they can do to try increasing their credit rating ranging from better management of their finances to relatively aggressive credit repair strategies. Depending on their individual credit situations, people have been able to take a poor credit rating and improve it by tens or even hundreds of points in far less than 7 years. In some cases, people have seen their credit scores go through the roof in a matter of months because they took the time to learn about the credit reporting system and put in the time to do something about their credit.

Your credit score is too important for you to play a passive role in its management. At the very least, everyone should know how their credit files are generated, how credit scores are calculated, and how their credit scores are used.

Anyone who's credit is not where they need it to be should also learn what can be done to repair their credit score and then take action by working to improve their credit on their own or by receiving credit help from one of the many credit repair services operating today.