I am now one year and one week post-discharge from my Chapter 13, or, said another way, 53 weeks into my credit rebuild journey. Over the last year I've done some things well, and made some careless mistakes, but I'm making significant progress; so here's an update:
Mistakes:
Mistakes:
- Applying for credit too soon after my discharge; as a result I racked up two "Hard Pulls" against my credit report, both of which resulted in denials.
- Assuming all "Secured Credit Cards" were created equal instead of doing a deep dive into that category of credit. The result was opening a CapitalOne Secured card with a limit of $1,000; totally insufficient for my normal monthly spend. I ended up closing that card after only six weeks; this in turn yielded yet another wasted "Hard Pull" against my credit and then a cut in my scores after I closed the account.
- Assuming a Discover Card "Pre-Approval" letter received in the mail would translate to an approval. Bzzzzt! I'm sorry, that is incorrect; I applied and got a fourth worthless Hard Pull against my reports.
- After becoming disenchanted with the CapitalOne secured card, I did my research and opted to open a secured card from TDBank with a useable credit limit. Six months after I opened the TDCash card it was unsecured by having the lock removed from my security savings account; the credit limit on that card is now $5,000.
- Six months after closing my CapitalOne secured card, CapitalOne contacted me and tempted me to come back by offering me an unsecured Quicksilver card with a $3,000 limit; yeah, I took the bait.
- My research indicates the best way to build credit scores is to obtain and maintain three major credit cards and have at least one personal loan (preferably two). After numerous "See if you're pre-approved" attempts with Discover Card's web page, and getting denied every time, I moved on to PenFed.
- Based upon advice from justbroke, I opened a simple savings account with PenFed and funded it with an eye to obtaining a Share Loan (basically a secured Credit Builder Loan); their underwriting rules require the money to be in the account for a minimum of 30 days before they'll initiate the loan.
- Yesterday I took a whack at applying for a PenFed Platinum Rewards Visa Signature® Card and was instantly approved with a starting limit of $6,000 (take that Discover!).
- Once the 30 day window passes I'll open the PenFed Share Loan and then sit tight until April 2022; by then my credit should, in theory at least take several bumps from the steps I've taken as well as the passing of the 7 year window for my Chapter 13 filing.
- After all of my steps over the last year, both good and bad, my Vantage 3 scores range from 690 to 705 and my FICO 8 Experian score (the only FICO 8 I have access to) is sitting at 653. With any luck, and if I can avoid "rebucketing", my scores will be in the mid-700s this time next year.
- Then in April 2022 my wife and I plan on applying for a mortgage and buying a new home.
- Credit recovery is a marathon, not a sprint; I tried to sprint last year right after my discharge and got slapped down for my efforts; don't let that happen to you.
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