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‎03-27-2014 02:35 PM
‎03-27-2014 02:35 PM
‎03-27-2014 02:35 PM
‎03-27-2014 03:01 PM
‎03-27-2014 03:17 PM
There is some good info on this thread but there is a lot of bad stuff posted...this thread is a good indicator of how many people really know little about how credit is reported and works in this country.
Kathy...great post....too bad it will go unnoticed or be challeneged by the ones who THINK they know how it all works.
‎03-27-2014 03:40 PM
On 3/27/2014 straykatz said:Thanks. There is no truth whatsoever to the statement that your credit score goes down if you are retired. The credit bureaus have absolutely no,knowledge of your monthly income whether retired or working and while a lending institution may factor that in when deciding on a loan application when you have provided them with that information the credit bureaus do not lower your score because you are retired. Also, the statement that medical providers send information to the credit bureaus on a regular basis is untrue and the very idea that your credit score might be lower because you visited a oncologist is so absurd I don't even know what to say.There is some good info on this thread but there is a lot of bad stuff posted...this thread is a good indicator of how many people really know little about how credit is reported and works in this country.
Kathy...great post....too bad it will go unnoticed or be challeneged by the ones who THINK they know how it all works.
‎03-27-2014 03:46 PM
Yeah, we don't use Equifax- too expensive and not as accurate for us- used mostly for home loans- Not that Transunion and Experian are that great- one runs 30 lines and the other 40-
In fact, there is a huge class action lawsuit going on right now to try and "even out" the scores as the bureaus report them
‎03-27-2014 03:48 PM
On 3/27/2014 KathyPet said:On 3/27/2014 straykatz said:Thanks. There is no truth whatsoever to the statement that your credit score goes down if you are retired. The credit bureaus have absolutely no,knowledge of your monthly income whether retired or working and while a lending institution may factor that in when deciding on a loan application when you have provided them with that information the credit bureaus do not lower your score because you are retired. Also, the statement that medical providers send information to the credit bureaus on a regular basis is untrue and the very idea that your credit score might be lower because you visited a oncologist is so absurd I don't even know what to say.There is some good info on this thread but there is a lot of bad stuff posted...this thread is a good indicator of how many people really know little about how credit is reported and works in this country.
Kathy...great post....too bad it will go unnoticed or be challeneged by the ones who THINK they know how it all works.
That is NOT what was said- a poster was asking about their medical records boing reported to the bureaus, and I replied that at most, an unpaid bill COULD be linked to a certain type of physician and a conclusion COULD be drawn by the person reading the report as to the persons health- NOT that that would be used in any type of scoring ...
‎03-27-2014 04:05 PM
On 3/27/2014 stilltamn8r said:Sorry I thought you were saying that the credit bureau would lower your score based on this. I suppose your statement could be true on a individual credit application but I think,it's a awfully big stretch. If you have a unpaid medical bill that has been turned over to a collection agency and they report it to the credit bureau as being owed to ABC Medical Associates or to Dr John Jones the person looking at your credit report would then have to go and investigate what,kind of medical speciality this particular individual Dr or medical practice specialized in. Rather a stretch IMHO especially if they can just turn you down because you have a unpaid collection on your report.On 3/27/2014 KathyPet said:On 3/27/2014 straykatz said:Thanks. There is no truth whatsoever to the statement that your credit score goes down if you are retired. The credit bureaus have absolutely no,knowledge of your monthly income whether retired or working and while a lending institution may factor that in when deciding on a loan application when you have provided them with that information the credit bureaus do not lower your score because you are retired. Also, the statement that medical providers send information to the credit bureaus on a regular basis is untrue and the very idea that your credit score might be lower because you visited a oncologist is so absurd I don't even know what to say.There is some good info on this thread but there is a lot of bad stuff posted...this thread is a good indicator of how many people really know little about how credit is reported and works in this country.
Kathy...great post....too bad it will go unnoticed or be challeneged by the ones who THINK they know how it all works.
That is NOT what was said- a poster was asking about their medical records boing reported to the bureaus, and I replied that at most, an unpaid bill COULD be linked to a certain type of physician and a conclusion COULD be drawn by the person reading the report as to the persons health- NOT that that would be used in any type of scoring ...
‎03-27-2014 04:09 PM
On 3/27/2014 KathyPet said:On 3/27/2014 stilltamn8r said:Sorry I thought you were saying that the credit bureau would lower your score based on this. I suppose your statement could be true on a individual credit application but I think,it's a awfully big stretch. If you have a unpaid medical bill that has been turned over to a collection agency and they report it to the credit bureau as being owed to ABC Medical Associates or to Dr John Jones the person looking at your credit report would then have to go and investigate what,kind of medical speciality this particular individual Dr or medical practice specialized in. Rather a stretch IMHO especially if they can just turn you down because you have a unpaid collection on your report.On 3/27/2014 KathyPet said:On 3/27/2014 straykatz said:Thanks. There is no truth whatsoever to the statement that your credit score goes down if you are retired. The credit bureaus have absolutely no,knowledge of your monthly income whether retired or working and while a lending institution may factor that in when deciding on a loan application when you have provided them with that information the credit bureaus do not lower your score because you are retired. Also, the statement that medical providers send information to the credit bureaus on a regular basis is untrue and the very idea that your credit score might be lower because you visited a oncologist is so absurd I don't even know what to say.There is some good info on this thread but there is a lot of bad stuff posted...this thread is a good indicator of how many people really know little about how credit is reported and works in this country.
Kathy...great post....too bad it will go unnoticed or be challeneged by the ones who THINK they know how it all works.
That is NOT what was said- a poster was asking about their medical records boing reported to the bureaus, and I replied that at most, an unpaid bill COULD be linked to a certain type of physician and a conclusion COULD be drawn by the person reading the report as to the persons health- NOT that that would be used in any type of scoring ...
True- I think my point was to reassure the poster that it is farfetched, at best, to think your medical info is available via the credit bureau-
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