How Late Credit Card Payments Affect Your Credit
July 17, 2010
Are you in the habit of not paying your credit card bill on time? Sure missing your due date by one or two weeks might not seem like a large deal but to your creditors it certainly is. You credit card company probably wont even call you to tell you you are late but they are taking action. Here are five things that might happen if you select to pay your credit card bill late:
Late Payments and Your Credit Score
Late payment fees and higher interest rates are undesired results of late credit card payments. Perhaps, the effect you most want to avoid is a hit to your credit score. What does a late payment really do to your score?
According to Credit.com, the credit score calculation doesn’t treat all late payments the same. While thirty- and sixty-day late payments affect your credit score more in the months they occur, they affect your credit score less as time passes. A ninety-day late payments, on the other hand, are more harmful to your credit score, especially if it occurred within the past 24 months.
This means…
- Missing one payment for one or two months won’t be so bad for your credit score.
- Missing several payments for one or two months is worse.
- Missing a payment for three months just one time is just as bad for your score as a charge-off or collection.








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