A better credit score means better rates on mortgages, loans, and credit cards. Here's how to improve yours.
Your credit score — or more accurately, your credit report — determines whether lenders will lend to you and at what rate. A strong credit profile means access to better mortgage rates, lower loan costs, and more financial flexibility. A poor one means higher rates, declined applications, and in some cases, being unable to borrow at all.
The good news: credit scores are not fixed. With consistent effort, most people can meaningfully improve their profile within 6–12 months.
In the UK, there are three main credit reference agencies: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. Each holds a file on you and has its own scoring model. Lenders use one or more of these agencies when assessing applications. Scores vary between agencies — what matters more than the number is the underlying information on your file.
Your credit file contains: payment history, amounts owed, length of credit history, types of credit, recent applications, and public records (CCJs, insolvency).
One of the simplest and most effective steps. Lenders use the electoral register to confirm your identity and address. Being registered adds points to your score at every agency. Register at gov.uk/register-to-vote.
Payment history is the single most important factor in your credit score. Set up direct debits for every credit account — credit cards, loans, phone contracts, utilities. Even one missed payment can stay on your file for 6 years.
Credit utilisation is the percentage of your available credit you're using. Using £1,500 of a £2,000 limit (75%) looks worse than using £1,500 of a £5,000 limit (30%). Aim to keep utilisation below 30% across all credit cards. Paying down balances and requesting credit limit increases (without spending more) both help.
Each full credit application ("hard search") leaves a mark on your file. Multiple applications in a short period signal financial distress to lenders. Use eligibility checkers (soft searches) before applying — these don't affect your score.
⚠️ If you're planning to apply for a mortgage, avoid applying for any new credit in the 3–6 months before application. Lenders are particularly sensitive to recent credit applications.
Paradoxically, having no credit history can be as problematic as having a bad one. Lenders need something to assess. A credit-builder credit card — used for small regular purchases and cleared in full each month — builds positive history without accumulating debt.
Errors are more common than you'd think — wrong addresses, linked to a previous partner's finances, duplicate accounts, or fraudulent activity. Get your full report from all three agencies (Experian, Equifax, TransUnion — all offer free access) and dispute any inaccuracies in writing.
Counterintuitively, closing old accounts can sometimes hurt your score by reducing your available credit (increasing utilisation) and shortening your credit history. Only close accounts that are genuinely causing problems.
💡 Planning to apply for a mortgage? Start working on your credit profile at least 6–12 months before you apply. A mortgage adviser can review your profile and tell you what to prioritise.
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