PersonalFinance: What to do about your credit cards now
Ken Lin, CEO of CreditKarma, says he's seeing some issuers add "processing fees" for new cardholders...
Ken Lin, CEO of CreditKarma, says he's seeing some issuers add "processing fees" for new cardholders...
U.S. consumers' average credit card debt in May fell to its lowest level so far this year, while credit scores held steady, according to new data Credit Karma released June 9.
"The rate of charge-offs seems to have peaked in December 2009 and January 2010," said Ken Lin, CEO of Credit Karma, the advocacy group.
In May, U.S. credit card debt was up 8 percent since last year, according to a report from Credit Karma Inc.
Ken Lin, chief executive of the Web site CreditKarma.com, explains that while all of the credit bureaus (the main ones are Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax) use the same criteria to judge your "credit worthiness" and often come up with similar scores, they can vary because they have different information and may analyze it slightly differently.
Check your credit score for free at CreditKarma.com. Your credit score will directly affect the mortgage rate you can get and how much of a down-payment your lender might require.
VALUE: Credit Karma offers one credit score, a credit report card explaining factors that make up your score and access to its credit simulator -- all for free.
Credit Karma is a free site that works with TransUnion to let you access an updated score as often as you like and track it through the months. At no cost. Not only that, but with its "Credit Report Card" feature, you get enough info to deduce what's in your TransUnion credit report, even though you don't see the actual report. Again, you can update that as often as you like. For free.
CreditKarma.com is worth a mention for its sheer awesomeness. The site allows you to monitor your FICO credit score absolutely free!... CreditKarma.com is definitely worth checking out, especially in these days of increasing financial desperation.
For those with no credit, like the graduating college student, CreditKarma is teaching traditionally hard-to-reach people how to begin the process of building credit. They then offer tools that show them -- based on real data -- how they can save dollars on big-ticket items.