Hello folks, since my Chapter 13 Discharge in early March this year, I've been using this site and others to A) closely monitor my credit rating, and B) formulate a plan to rebuild my credit rating as quickly as possible. One of the things I was surprised at was my credit rating on the day of my discharge was 714; upon further analysis, it seems the high rating is due to the number of credit cards and lines of credit I'd had open for well over 30 years prior to filing for bankruptcy. When I look at my credit rating now, one of most consistent "Positive Factors" listed on my various credit reports, regardless of which service they were obtained from, is "Length of Credit History (How long you've had credit)".
My concern when I do a deeper dive on my credit report is all of those long standing accounts were closed during the Chapter 13, and based upon what I've learned from this site, they are slated to drop off my credit report on the second anniversary of my Discharge (i.e. March 2022). With my current FICO ranging from 685 on Equifax to 720 on TransUnion, I am pretty solidly in the "Good" range, at the moment; my fear is when those old accounts drop off in 18 more months, I'll drop from "Good" to only "Fair". Is this a valid concern, or will approximately 21 months of perfect credit history suffice to hold me in the "Good" category once I lose my long term history?
I know the above question isn't an exact science, but if anybody can opine on what they think will happen, that would be greatly appreciated.
My concern when I do a deeper dive on my credit report is all of those long standing accounts were closed during the Chapter 13, and based upon what I've learned from this site, they are slated to drop off my credit report on the second anniversary of my Discharge (i.e. March 2022). With my current FICO ranging from 685 on Equifax to 720 on TransUnion, I am pretty solidly in the "Good" range, at the moment; my fear is when those old accounts drop off in 18 more months, I'll drop from "Good" to only "Fair". Is this a valid concern, or will approximately 21 months of perfect credit history suffice to hold me in the "Good" category once I lose my long term history?
I know the above question isn't an exact science, but if anybody can opine on what they think will happen, that would be greatly appreciated.
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