I read this forum endlessly before I filed and periodically during the rebuilding process, so I feel obligated to share my journey for the benefit of others. I filed CH7 about 2 years ago and burned BOA, USAA, AMEX, and a small CU.
Days after discharge, I got a secured Capitol One Credit Card. 2-4 weeks later I got a Credit One and Indigo Card. Over the course of a few months I got a credit card from a small credit union and Navy FCU.
Shy of 1 year post-discharge I got a new auto loan at 6.7% with Toyota Financial. I probably could refinance for a lower rate today, but then I lose the active account history on this account.
Recently approved for a $20,000 unsecured personal loan with PenFed at 9.9% which is pretty decent rate even before bankruptcy on an unsecured signature loan.
I have shopped around the credit market and opened and closed a handful of credit cards over the last 2 years. I have more inquiries than typical or recommended from shopping around, but they don't seem to be a big issue if you give it 3 months or so in between a 2 or 3 inquiries to show you aren't binging your way into debt. It seems most banks understand you have to shop around these days especially after bankruptcy.
Current Cards:
Discover $5,000
Capitol One Platinum $3,000
Small Local Credit Union $1,000
Capitol One Secured $800
Capitol One Wal-Mart $600
Target $500
I have used Credit Karma since I filed. Their recommendations have been on par as far as approval odds. They show I have several pre-approved offers now on loans and credit cards. Their site recommended some of the cards I have. Capital One and Discover have a pre-qualification application on their website using a soft pull versus hard pull.
Pre-filing I had endless stress expecting a very long road ahead. I am pretty happy with where I am today 2 years later. Although 2 years ago it seemed like today would never come. My scores seem to hover around high 600's to low 700's). I typically do not carry a balance on the credit cards. The one or two months I did, there was a substantial drop in my score, but it bounces right back the next month after paying.
If you are thinking about filing, have filed recently, or early in recovery....don't stress it. I wish I didn't stress it so much.
Days after discharge, I got a secured Capitol One Credit Card. 2-4 weeks later I got a Credit One and Indigo Card. Over the course of a few months I got a credit card from a small credit union and Navy FCU.
Shy of 1 year post-discharge I got a new auto loan at 6.7% with Toyota Financial. I probably could refinance for a lower rate today, but then I lose the active account history on this account.
Recently approved for a $20,000 unsecured personal loan with PenFed at 9.9% which is pretty decent rate even before bankruptcy on an unsecured signature loan.
I have shopped around the credit market and opened and closed a handful of credit cards over the last 2 years. I have more inquiries than typical or recommended from shopping around, but they don't seem to be a big issue if you give it 3 months or so in between a 2 or 3 inquiries to show you aren't binging your way into debt. It seems most banks understand you have to shop around these days especially after bankruptcy.
Current Cards:
Discover $5,000
Capitol One Platinum $3,000
Small Local Credit Union $1,000
Capitol One Secured $800
Capitol One Wal-Mart $600
Target $500
I have used Credit Karma since I filed. Their recommendations have been on par as far as approval odds. They show I have several pre-approved offers now on loans and credit cards. Their site recommended some of the cards I have. Capital One and Discover have a pre-qualification application on their website using a soft pull versus hard pull.
Pre-filing I had endless stress expecting a very long road ahead. I am pretty happy with where I am today 2 years later. Although 2 years ago it seemed like today would never come. My scores seem to hover around high 600's to low 700's). I typically do not carry a balance on the credit cards. The one or two months I did, there was a substantial drop in my score, but it bounces right back the next month after paying.
If you are thinking about filing, have filed recently, or early in recovery....don't stress it. I wish I didn't stress it so much.
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