New York Post

Fixing your credit rating takes time

- By GREGORY BRESIGER

So your credit rating horrible.

Over the years, you used credit recklessly. You paid bills late. You didn’t keep track of cumulative card debt — or what it was doing to your creditwort­hiness.

The good news is you can fix your credit, regulators and card specialist­s is say, but it will take a longterm effort.

“There are no quick fixes to clean up your credit,” said Lisa Lake, a consumer education specialist with the FTC.

“Start being very diligent in paying your bills,” said Bill Hardekopf, the founder of LowCards.com, a credit card advice Web site.

Ted Rossman, an industry analyst with CreditCard­s.com, said to reduce high credit card debts “by making an extra payment or two,” which improves a credit rating.

Take these additional steps, card specialist­s say, to achieve a better rating.

▪Get a free copy of your credit report and go over it carefully. Do you recognize all the accounts? Rossman warned “20 percent of all US adults have errors on their credit reports.” If you find any, contact the credit bureaus that reported the wrong informatio­n. Under law, they must delete it.

▪Time can correct negative informatio­n on a credit report. By paying all bills on time and jettisonin­g old debt as well as not creating new debt, you will eventually re-establish a good credit rating.

Consider a secured credit card, which requires a deposit.

Credit Karma recommends Capital One Secured Master Card, First Progress Platinum Prestige Master Card or Green Dot primor Visa Gold Secured Credit Card.

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