Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Ask lenders to help scrub late payments

- By Liz Weston Liz Weston, Certified Financial Planner, is a personal finance columnist for NerdWallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizwest­on.com.

Dear Liz: I had a problem last year and had no income so I couldn’t pay my bills for three months. I explained the situation to my creditors, but they still put the late payments on my credit reports. I called and sent letters, but it was no good: My credit score dropped to the mid-500s. How can I get the late payments taken off?

Answer: Last year, many lenders offered various kinds of hardship programs because of the pandemic. If you were approved for forbearanc­e, the payments you missed should not have been reported as late. You could dispute the errors at the three credit bureaus (start at www.annualcred­itreport

.com) and ask the lenders to correct the record.

Unfortunat­ely, lenders don’t always tell customers that forbearanc­e or other hardship programs are available. If you weren’t given the option to enroll when you called to explain your problem, contact your lenders again, in writing, to point that out and request that the late payments be removed from your credit reports.

If a lender refuses to cooperate, consider making a complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

A mysterious bump in a credit score

Dear Liz: I know there are different factors involved, but I find a recent upsurge in my FICO score inexplicab­le. My score went from about 740 to 815, according to a note in my most recent credit card statement. Yet I’ve done virtually nothing in the way of major credit activity — no purchases, no change in my already-low credit card use. I transferre­d about $800 from one card to another, and that’s it. If such small matters can affect the FICO score, it makes that score seem ridiculous. Can you offer any possible explanatio­ns?

Answer: Credit scoring formulas are a bit of a black box, but they are sensitive to how much of your available credit you’re using.

If you transferre­d the balance from a card with a very low credit limit to one with a higher limit, your scores typically would improve — although perhaps not as dramatical­ly as the increase you’re describing.

Your scores might also improve if your balances dropped on other accounts or something that was negatively impacting your credit “fell off ” or stopped being reported. The simple passage of time can improve your scores, as well, increasing the age of your credit accounts and the time since your last applicatio­n for credit.

It’s impossible to say exactly what combinatio­n of factors may have affected the score you saw, but at least it moved in the right direction.

Social Security after a spouse dies

Dear Liz: My husband recently died. Since he and I received essentiall­y the same amount from Social Security, I will not receive any additional money. Can you explain this? Social Security could not when I both called and went to the local office. I have not seen this addressed in your column. I would think this would be a problem for many spouses.

Answer: The issue of survivor benefits has been addressed frequently in this column, but unfortunat­ely many people still don’t understand that their benefits will drop, sometimes precipitou­sly, when their spouse dies.

When one member of a married couple dies, one of their two Social Security checks goes away and the survivor gets the larger of the two benefits. If your husband’s check had been larger than yours, that amount would become your survivor benefit. If your benefit was the larger of the two, you would continue getting that amount.

Many people don’t consider the impact their claiming decisions will have on their surviving spouse, which is unfortunat­e since the survivor could live years or even decades on this reduced income. Couples often can maximize their benefits and lessen the severity of this drop in income by making sure the higher earner delays their Social Security applicatio­n as long as possible, ideally until it maxes out at age 70.

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