Marlys Harris

The Consumer Reporter

Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?

By Marlys Harris | Oct 17, 2009 |

Seriously. Why should you buy your credit score? After all, the score is based on your information. Shouldn’t it belong to you? Yet federal law requires you to pay $15 to get it. The fee is a gift to credit scoring companies like Fair Isaac, Choicepoint, TransUnion and Vantage. They don’t need the dough; they already collect zillions of dollars from banks, car dealerships and other lenders who buy your score to make sure they’re charging you enough to offset their risk.

True, some websites offer you the score for free, but only if you give them your credit card number and sign up for a monthly credit monitoring service, an item you don’t need unless you are planning to buy a house and a car every other day. Some of them, like freescore.com, peddled by celebrity economist Ben Stein (whom I wrote about a while ago), charge as much as $29.95 a month, an outrageous amount to learn, for example, that Greedibank made an inquiry to see if you are worthy enough to receive an offer for its Visa Extortion card.

Sometimes I think (actually I think it pretty much all the time) that the hullabaloo about the importance of knowing your credit score — and knowing it every moment of the day — is nothing more than propaganda pumped out by the scoring companies to scare you. Oooh, you’d better get your score or something terrible will happen! Ooh, your score will follow you wherever you go! Doesn’t this remind you of the Permanent Record that teachers warned you about in high school? When you finally got to college, you realized that nobody cared that you got a D in French.

I developed my own guerrilla method of getting my score without paying. I download a credit report from the official government website annualcreditreport.com (which allows you to get three free reports a year, one from each of the three major credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian and TransUnion). Then I fed the data into the FICO Estimator at the webiste of Fair Isaac, the company that invented the credit score. The number should be close to the actual score.

A couple of new enterprises have caught my why-pay-for-it fever. Credit Karma buys your score from TransUnion and lets you have it for free, along with tips on raising it (if it’s low). The drawback: You have to opt in to receive email from the company. (Of course, if you’re really a free-loader, you could direct the stuff to your spam folder.) Credit.com, a financial services website, offers a similar service. It downloads your report from TransUnion and shows you how you rank on credit scoring systems used by Fair Isaac, Vantage and TransUnion. It doesn’t give you a score, only a grade on the five ingredients of your score, but that should be enough to tell you whether you have a problem.

These are all good workarounds. But now that Congress is considering a batch of financial reforms, here’s one that would be easy to enact: Repeal the stupid $15 charge and give consumers access to their own financial information.

 
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  •  
    1

    PokerGob

    10/17/09 | Report as spam

    Pay

    Do you think the fee for credit reports is made so people won't be as inclined to check a person's credit report indiscriminately? Will the law allow for a person to check their own credit report, but still have a fee for third parties?

    Hyacinth
    etaBlog - A Blog with an Anecdote for everyone.

  •  
    2

    MarlysHarris

    10/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?

    Hyacinth,
    You can get your credit report free from annualcreditreport.com, as I
    mentioned above. What you have to BUY is your credit score. It's
    accumulated from all the credit report data, scrunched into a formula that
    creates one number, which is used by banks and other lenders in
    deciding whether you get a loan. And I think that the $15 fee is just a
    "revenue enhancer."

  •  
    3

    allamerathlete@...

    10/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?

    title="credit inquiry..
    removal">
    http://www.RemoveMyCreditInquiries.org is a
    site I found that will remove credit inquiry for $15.

  •  
    4

    Milton F.

    10/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?

    In defense of the credit bureaus, they do have to have some infrastructure and some service to provide you with the scores and the information.

    Enough of that. They are the credit bureaus and are something of a blight on our society.

    The credit monitoring services prey upon a ripe culture of fear. Fear that someone will hack your identity, without you noticing it, and ruin your ability to get a mortgage or a car loan or a credit card. Things that you may not actually need or want anyway, if you were to sit down and think rationally about them. Be afraid, because there are predators out there. They are legion and they want the $12 in your savings account. Consider the ads for freecreditscore.com with the annoying kids working junky jobs and complaining about how their girlfriend or a some hacker ruined their credit and if they had only had their credit score, they would have been on top of it and living the high life. What they do not mention in these ads is that they would likely use their enhanced credit to buy a mcmansion and a lexus. Which they would pay for by writing idiotic ditties for the banks. Sorry, I do not buy that life would be better if only they had known their girlfriend had a card charged off at some point.

    The economist uses Credit Karma and finds that their emails are not particularly frequent, a monthly one to remind me to check it again, mostly. It's possible that I have opted out of a bunch of mailings and they can be obnoxious if you aren't on the ball. It's also possible I set up a filter to trash everything from them. I don't recall. I like Karma. It's good enough for what I'm up to, along with my government provided free annual credit report.

    Be not afraid, folks. Remember, the only thing we have to fear, is fear itself. And the people who trade in it.

  •  
    5

    harriman1

    10/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why Should You Have to Pay for Your Credit Score?

    I'm so glad someone feels like I do about the free credit report. I do not feel that I should have to pay for my credit report, not even a $1.00. I will try annualcreditreport.com and hopefully they will not be a charge if there is I will not accept it. Do you know how I can get it sent to my home address?

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Marlys Harris

Marlys Harris has been covering personal finance at least since the time of the Pharaohs, first in 12 years at Money and then as finance editor at Consumer Reports. She has written and edited stories on just about everything having to do with money, from workers comp to marrying for money.

Marlys Harris

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