Bad credit loans you can get
If you have made some mistakes in the
past as far as your credit is concerned, brace yourself for the
facts about bad credit loans. You should first try to assess just
how bad your credit is before you hit the panic button though. Very
often, bad credit items that appear on your credit report can be
challenged and sometimes removed. In addition, mistakes on your
credit
report can have an adverse effect on your credit score, shunting
you into the category of a high credit risk.
Items that are good news for you but do not show up on your credit
report (or on one or the other of the credit reporting bureaus'
file on your credit history), can cost you some valuable points.
Last, but not least, taking bad advice from well-intentioned relatives
or friends can lower your credit score, making you a candidate for
bad credit loans.
Bad news first
Let's look at these possibilities for improving your credit rating
one at a time. But first, let's get the hard core issues out of
the way. If you have had bad credit issues in the past and know
you have made some wrong choices that may have landed you in bankruptcy
or wage garnishment it will be almost impossible to fix your situation
in the short term. Medical emergencies have unavoidable consequences
as well but none of these means you will not be able to find a lender
of last resort.
If you are reading this you are probably at the point where
you have decided to turn around your spiraling credit history but
know for sure that this will take time and will cost you money.
Bad credit lenders will equate you with high risk and assign a high
interest rate to whatever type of loan you are seeking in order
to offset some of the risk that you may not pay back their loan
on time.
Bad credit car loan
Let's say you are in the market for a car.
You will be required to make a hefty down payment on a bad credit
car loan. I have heard of down payment requirements as high as $3,000
but that is not the only problem you face. Your interest rate on
a bad credit car loan may range from 19% on the low end to high
as high as 29% on the top end. A high-mileage used car could end
up costing you $400.00 or more per month in monthly payments. To
minimize the damage from these high rates, I would suggest you start
by calling several lenders. They usually both sell and finance the
product on the spot. If you can find one whose maximum interest
rate is in the low twenties you may be able to save a substantial
amount of interest payments. You must make sure though, that they
report your payment history to the credit bureaus as this will help
to improve your credit score provided you pay on time.
Bad credit personal loan
Bad credit personal loans are issued by a variety of sources. Here
again their emphasis will be on charging you a high interest rate
to cover the risk of your defaulting on the loan. Payday loans are
an example of bad credit personal loans that carry enormously high
rates of interest as they are calculated over a short time span
and are designed to get you to the next paycheck.
Other types of personal
loans include equity-backed loans. Let's say you have a home
or some other asset that is almost or fully paid off. Local and
regional banks or home equity specialists will lend you money using
your asset as collateral. Although a loan of that nature will be
safer for the lending institution, your past credit history will
force you into a bracket paying somewhere around 21%, despite the
use of your collateral.
Bad credit mortgage loan
This is the big ticket item that will cost you dearly over the
life of the loan. Consumers with credit scores above 650 may find
themselves paying say, six percent on their mortgage loan, depending
on the prevailing interest rates at the time of their purchase.
If you have bad credit, you should be prepared to pay two and a
half to three percentage points more and sometimes into double figures
on your mortgage rate. Depending on the prevailing economic circumstances
you may find it very difficult to get a mortgage at any rate. You
can expect that any lender looking at your loan application will
expect you to have a substantial down payment in hand, ranging from
10% to 20% of the value of the home you are trying to purchase.
Not only should you expect to face a high interest rate, but also,
your lender will require you to purchase private mortgage insurance
to cover the risk of your defaulting on a payment. If your down
payment is higher than 20% of the cost of the home you are buying,
you may be able to negotiate away paying PMI, even on a bad credit
mortgage loan.
As with a bad credit
card loan, your history of on-time payments will begin to raise
your credit score over time. Given a record of good payments, you
may be able to refinance at a more reasonable interest rate. But
before you sign for your bad credit mortgage loan in the first place,
be sure to check the penalties for getting out of the loan early.
Pre-payment penalties may be enormous and most people are so excited
to get a bad credit mortgage loan, they neglect to consider what
may change three years down the line.
Cleaning up bad credit items
Let's say your situation is so bad that you can't find a lender
willing to risk lending you money. Where do you go from here? You
could wait a few years until bad credit items on your credit report
fall off, usually in seven years for most items. Or you could begin
the process of cleaning up your credit report as even a difference
of a few points on your credit report score could make the difference
between getting a loan or a refusal. If there are items on your
credit report that are incorrect or should have been removed because
of their age, write the credit bureaus and request their removal.
They are required by federal law to make those corrections.
Mistakes on your credit report can be caused by human error. An
account with a bad history could appear on your report because a
clerk typed someone's social security number one digit off. Rest
assured, it happens. You could end up being saddled with someone
else's court record but you wouldn't know until you inspect a copy
of your credit
report.
Include the good news
If you have paid off a delinquent account in the past but it does
not show on your credit report, you will want to present proof of
payment to the credit bureaus and have their records corrected.
That can mean a few points on your credit report score. You may
find that a car note you have paid off was never reported to the
credit bureau and though your payments were all on time, you are
not receiving the benefits of that piece of good credit history.
Contact the lender and ask them if they will report your credit
file to the bureaus.
A word of caution
Well-intentioned friends and family often "hear" that you should
do this, or that, to raise your credit
report score and improve your chances of getting a bad credit
loan. The most popular advice is that you should close your credit
card accounts. This may sound reasonable but may affect you adversely.
Make sure that if you take that route, you do not close the accounts
with the longest history. It may be safer to close newer accounts
but you should know that part of your credit report score is calculated
by looking at the ratio of outstanding debt to total available credit.
Close some accounts, lower your available credit and your score
could go down.
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