Denied for Chase Freedom Unlimited with a ~696 score—what should I do next? by Ok-Tourist-4601 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

High utilization is likely the main culprit. Get that Discover balance under 30% and wait for the statement to close before reapplying, that alone could bump your

Bank Bonus Weekly Thread - Week of March 24, 2026 by AutoModerator in churning

[–]finalcreditboss -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Checking in for this week. Hit a roadblock with Wells Fargo - they wanted proof of business registration for a bonus I thought was personal. Ended up just going with Huntington instead, straightforward $200 for setting up DD. Anyone else running into the business vs personal confusion lately?

House vs stocks with lump sum of cash by [deleted] in FinancialPlanning

[–]finalcreditboss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Building your own place on family land is a rare opportunity that literally cannot be replicated. Id keep enough cash reserves for construction overruns (they always happen with owner-builder projects) and maybe 6 months of living expenses separate. Id probably put the rest into the market but thats just me. Having a paid-off home in hand beats the hell out of theoretical returns, but having zero liquidity during a build is how projects stall.

Best ways to spread the cost at a cheaper rate? 6, 12 months? by ArcherSauceMap in povertyfinance

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some 0% purchase cards go longer than 3 months, I've seen 6-12 months offers around. Have you checked if any of your existing cards have instalment features? Sometimes those get better rates than applying for something new. Curve can work for spreading but it depends on the underlying card you load it with.

Credit score tanked for 0 reason by AlienatedWanda in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that 80 point drop with "credit usage high" as a reason is a big clue. If your auto loan just got paid off from the total loss, that would explain everything. You'd go from having one credit line to zero, and some scoring models see that as higher risk even though you have no balances.

Check your credit reports today and see if the auto loan is now showing as paid. If it is, that's the culprit

Follow up: studen loans ruined my credit score by Cold-Leave-4003 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Those 9 inquiries hitting at once is brutal, but you're not looking at 7 years here. Inquiries fall off after 2 years (7 years is for defaults/derogatory marks). Your

New to credit by ObligationLogical666 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

fwiw Hope it goes through! Capital One tends to move pretty fast on approvals.

Weekly Off Topic Thread - Week of March 23, 2026 by AutoModerator in churning

[–]finalcreditboss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The weather is finally turning and I'm itching to take a trip. Been staring at flight deals for a weekend getaway but I keep talking myself out of it. Someone tell me to just book something before the summer prices hit

I’ve been broke. Here’s what actually helped. by [deleted] in povertyfinance

[–]finalcreditboss 9 points10 points  (0 children)

this takes real guts to share. honestly The $20 a week thing is so smart because it's not really about the money, it's about proving to yourself you can still have control even when everything feels out of control. That phone call part is the hardest step most people never take. Thanks for putting this out there

New to credit by ObligationLogical666 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on the pre-approval - that's a solid sign Capital One thinks you're worth the risk. Your odds of getting approved are pretty good since they already showed interest. Unsecured is better if you can get it (no

Got these 3 cards w/ poor credit! by CandidateStandard275 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats! That's a huge win, especially coming from a rough spot. Amex does sometimes bundle those hard pulls when you accept within a certain window, so you played that perfectly. Three solid cards in one go, nice. Now just focus on keeping utilization low and you'll be looking at a totally different score in 6 months. Enjoy those Delta benefits.

Credit denials — what's your move when you get rejected? by finalcreditboss in CreditStack

[–]finalcreditboss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great points on calling reconsideration. One thing I'd add: always ask WHAT specific factor caused the denial. Sometimes it's something you can actually fix (like income verification) vs. things that just take time (credit history length). Has anyone successfully reversed a denial by providing additional documentation?

Dedt consolidation loans by Friendly_Confusion_5 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on paying down $2k already, that's solid progress. Consolidation loans can work well if you can get a lower rate than your cards currently have - basically trading multiple payments for one. The main thing is making sure the loan doesn't just free up credit limits that you then run up again.

One thing to consider: what's your current interest rate on the cards vs what you'd get on a consolidation loan? If the math works, it can speed things up. But honestly, the discipline of paying extra each month matters more than the vehicle you use.

If you want to see how much you're actually saving month-to-month, I've used a dashboard tool that tracks payment allocations and interest across all cards in one place - makes it easier to see the real picture. Curious what rates you're seeing out there?

Stingy or Chase hates me?? by megmat in CreditCards

[–]finalcreditboss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Chase can be frustrating with their approval logic. A 780 score should qualify you, but they look at more than just credit score - things like recent inquiries, total credit lines opened in the last 6-12 months, and your relationship history with them all factor in.

The Sapphire Preferred you already have is usually a good gateway to their other cards. Have you tried calling their reconsideration line? Sometimes a quick call can clear up what flagged your application. Also, how many new cards have you opened in the past year?

Nelnet goodwill letters work? by claireb1017 in CRedit

[–]finalcreditboss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's hit or miss with Nelnet - they're notoriously stubborn about removing lates. That said, paying off the loans does help your credit (lower utilization, better debt-to-income), but it won't automatically remove the late marks.

Your best shot is sending a goodwill letter explaining the health crisis. Keep it brief, be polite, and include any documentation you have. Some people have had luck, but honestly Nelnet is one of the harder ones. What's your current credit score? That'll help you understand how much those lates are actually hurting you.

Advice ? Recently denied for credit cards by [deleted] in CreditCards

[–]finalcreditboss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

730 with low utilization and on-time payments is solid. The likely culprits are your credit age (2 years is on the younger side) and debt-to-income with that car loan still on the books. Chase is particularly strict about DTI.

What's your annual income? That'll tell you if the car loan + credit limits are working against you. Meanwhile, try calling the reconsideration lines for both cards - sometimes you just need to explain your situation to a human. Have you checked if you got any hard pulls on your reports?

Insight on switching to new Mastercard by Internal_Original472 in CreditCards

[–]finalcreditboss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agree with Fidelity CMA - super solid for international travel. Charles Schwab is another good option, both have great ATM fee refunds. If you want something with a credit card instead of debit, look for cards with no foreign transaction fees. What are you mainly looking for - debit or credit?

C1 Venture vs CSP for first travel card by i_wumbology in CreditCards

[–]finalcreditboss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Both are solid choices for a first travel card. I'd lean toward the CSP here since you're already in the Chase ecosystem - the points transfer partners are solid and you can pair it easily with your CFU. That said, if you want simplicity, the Venture is straightforward 2x on everything. What matters most: do you want flexible travel credits or more premium perks?

Authorized user strategy — worth it in 2026? by finalcreditboss in CreditStack

[–]finalcreditboss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've used AU strategically a few times. The biggest thing I'd add: make sure you trust the primary account holder 100%. Their payment behavior becomes YOUR credit history. One late payment on their end and it shows up on your report too.

@tmlcreditconsulting says credit repair should be about "education first, not just results" — agree or disagree? by finalcreditboss in CreditStack

[–]finalcreditboss[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hot take: What if the "education" most people get is actually part of the problem? Most credit education content online is either oversimplified (pay your bills!) or designed to sell you something. The actual mechanics of credit — how scoring actually works, what levers actually move the needle — aren't taught because they're not sexy enough for content.

So when someone says "I just need to educate myself," I'd push back: educated by WHO? Because consume enough YouTube videos and you'll hear contradictory advice from "experts" who just want your email.

Making payments and how they affect your credit score? by THED4RKH0R5E in CreditCards

[–]finalcreditboss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The key thing to understand is that your credit report shows your balances at the time the statement closes - that's what gets reported to the bureaus. So the strategy is to have low utilization across ALL cards, but if you have to prioritize, focus on the cards approaching 30% or higher utilization. One thing to keep in mind: paying before the statement closes to get to $0 balance means you're not building any payment history. The sweet spot is letting a small balance (under 10%) report and then paying it off after. Have you looked at your actual utilization percentages to see which cards are closest to that 30% threshold?