Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?
Credit Karma buys your score from TransUnion and lets you have it for free, along with tips on raising it (if it's low).
Credit Karma buys your score from TransUnion and lets you have it for free, along with tips on raising it (if it's low).
However, Credit Karma is offering your credit information including score for FREE! How do they do it? The advertisers pay for this service. NICE!... This is an amazing tool to take charge of your credit.
If you don't want to pay a fee for the score, you can get a pretty could idea of the range of your score by visiting www.credit.com and https://www.creditkarma.com. These sites also offer valuable information on how your score is determined and how you can improve it.
You can get a free approximation of your score at www.creditkarma.com
CreditKarma, launched a little over a year ago, offers a free credit score from TransUnion, along with a credit analysis tool and simulator, which helps you see how certain actions (say, applying for a new credit card or paying late) will affect your current score.
Denver borrowers recorded a 7 percent rate of decrease in their credit-card balances during the third quarter versus a 5 percent decline in Colorado and a 4 percent decline nationally, according to a report Wednesday from Credit Karma, a San Francisco provider of consumer credit-reporting services.
Like most good things in life, credit cards can do us good or bad. So will the limitation help or hinder? According to Ken Lin of Credit Karma, this limitation could just keep young adults from building credit.
CreditKarma.com, which also relies on TransUnion data, gives you one of the same credit scores that TransUnion sells directly to consumers. In addition, it provides a report card grading consumers from A to F across seven key components affecting their scores and ranks the importance of each factor on a scale of high, medium or low.
Credit Karma.com, which launched its Web site in March 2008, now has close to 1 million users who have checked out their score, according to Ken Lin, founder and CEO of the San Francisco company. "People are so worried about ID theft and their credit these days, it really helped with growth," Lin said. "Credit scores have been a very opaque process. There's been very little visibility on how it works."
Now, there are two ways to get a pretty good sense of your credit score for free. First, Creditkarma.com will give you an actual credit score. I have checked my score a couple of times through this site and have found it to be accurate.