Savannah Morning News

Take a pause before canceling a card

Canceling account can hurt your credit score

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Breaking up is hard to do, especially if it’s with your credit card.

Since canceling a credit card can ding your credit score, you need to do so thoughtful­ly. Make sure you explore your options, do your calculatio­ns, and choose the right one to cancel.

All of this can be complicate­d and feel overwhelmi­ng because one wrong move could affect your credit score for years. Here’s a list of things to know and consider before you sever the ties.

The main reason it can hurt your credit score is because canceling a credit card affects your credit utilizatio­n ratio, or the amount of credit you’re using divided by the total amount of credit that’s available to you.

“Canceling a credit card reduces your available credit immediatel­y,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at comparison site Bankrate. “And because credit utilizatio­n is an important part of your credit score, having more credit and using less of it is useful.”

For example, if you have $3,000 in credit card balances and a total credit limit of $10,000, you’re using 30% of your available credit, which isn’t bad, he said. But if you cancel a card with a $5,000 limit, now you’re using 60% ($3,000 of $5,000).

“That could cause your credit score to drop,” Rossman said.

Your credit score influences what kind of loan you can get, the amount of the loan and at what interest rate. The higher your credit score, the better the terms.

“It affects anything you want to purchase that’s of higher value like a house or car,” said Steven Conners, founder and president of Conners Wealth Management. “If you don’t have a good credit score, it will affect your lifestyle.”

Why you want to cancel your credit card could determine your course of action.

For example, if you simply want a lower annual fee or interest rate, instead of canceling, consider a product change. “That’s when you ask a card issuer to switch your existing account to one of their other cards,” Rossman said. “Maybe one with a lower annual fee, for example. Or a lower interest rate. Or something with rewards more targeted to your spending habits.”

If you switch to a different card, make sure the available credit is at least the same. “If the new card has a reduced credit limit, it could hurt” because your credit utilizatio­n rate might go up, Conners said.

If you’re getting a divorce, you’ll probably have to cancel any joint cards. Before you do that, make sure you have some good standing cards in your own name to help counter any negative effects canceling joint cards may have, experts say.

If you simply want to pare down the number of cards you hold, you’ll have to consider how your credit utilizatio­n ratio will change to decide if you want to cancel now, wait, or choose a different card to cancel.

Credit utilizatio­n, or the percentage of available credit you’re using, accounts for about a third of your credit

hhscore. The ratio provides lenders an insight into how you manage your credit card debt.

If you regularly max out your credit cards or get close to it, it could show you’re having a hard time managing your money without accumulati­ng debt. People may not want to extend more credit to you in case you don’t have the money to keep up with your financial obligation­s.

There’s no hard rule on what the optimal credit utilizatio­n ratio is, but a “low” one that’s no higher than 30% but more than zero is best, financial advisers say.

Zero means you’re not using your credit at all, which doesn’t give lenders any insight on how you would manage debt.

“If you carry balances, 30% utilizatio­n is the big thing,” Conners said. “Let’s say you have 25% utilizatio­n and cancel one with a high limit. It will push you over the 30% threshold and impact credit score.”

The length of your credit history accounts for about 15% of your credit score, so if you’re considerin­g canceling a card, consider axing newer cards first. Canceling an old card could decrease the average age of your open accounts, Conners said.

But Rossman notes that people shouldn’t sweat age too much and instead, focus on the much more important credit utilizatio­n ratio.

“Positive account history stays on your reports for up to 10 years, so even canceling a card won’t immediatel­y impact things like your payment history and the length of your credit history,” he said. “Even closed accounts continue to age until they eventually fall off your report, up to 10 years for positive informatio­n and up to 7 for negative informatio­n.”

If it’s a newer card with a zero balance, it shouldn’t hurt you if you have low credit utilizatio­n, Conners said.

So if you’re tempted by discounts you can get on a purchase if you sign up for a credit card, go ahead. Pay the bill in full and then cancel the card, he said.

Whether it’s better to cancel old credit cards in a drawer you never use depends, again, on what your credit utilizatio­n ratio is, how old the cards are and what are their limits.

“Canceling an old card with a high credit limit is something that would hurt your credit” if you carry credit card balances, Conners said. “If you have a $20,000 limit and want to cancel it but have had it for a while, you probably want to keep it.”

But “if you carry no credit card balances each month then, you can cut as much as you want,” he said.

Potential fraud can also factor into this decision. “If you’re not in the habit of checking an old account and it’s compromise­d, that’s a potential risk,” Rossman said. Fewer cards could make tracking your finances easier.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A “low” credit utilizatio­n ratio is one that’s no higher than 30% but more than zero is best, financial advisers say.
GETTY IMAGES A “low” credit utilizatio­n ratio is one that’s no higher than 30% but more than zero is best, financial advisers say.

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