{"title":"What Is a Good Credit Score","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/credit-score/what-is-a-good-credit-score","category":{"slug":"credit-score","name":"Credit Score"},"creator":{"name":"TruFinancials","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClpIXHZYpR7o0FGeoeDULtw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgEo5TrSOTE"},"tldr":"What is a good credit score? The five FICO ranges from poor to excellent, what 670 actually buys you, and how to check yours for free.","totalDurationSeconds":277,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Know the 300-to-850 Scale","text":"Every credit score you will ever see lives on a 300-to-850 scale. Watch the intro at 0:04. The two big scoring models, FICO and VantageScore, both use this range. FICO is the one most lenders care about - it shows up in roughly 90 percent of US lending decisions. VantageScore is what you usually see when you peek at your score through Credit Karma or your bank's free app. The two models can give you slightly different numbers from the same credit file because they weight things a little differently, but the 300 to 850 scale is the same. Three hundred is rock bottom. Eight fifty is a perfect score, and only about 1.7 percent of adults ever hit it."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Memorize the Five FICO Ranges","text":"FICO splits the 300-to-850 scale into five buckets. Watch the breakdown at 0:16. From bottom to top: 300 to 579 is poor, 580 to 669 is fair, 670 to 739 is good, 740 to 799 is very good, and 800 to 850 is excellent. VantageScore uses similar ranges but shifts the cutoffs slightly - their \"good\" range starts at 661 instead of 670. Most lenders use FICO, so those are the numbers worth memorizing. Where you land in this chart tells you whether a lender will approve you, what your interest rate will look like, and whether you will be asked for a co-signer or a bigger down payment."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Understand What 'Good' Really Means","text":"A score in the 670-to-739 range is the threshold lenders mean when they say \"good credit.\" Watch the explanation at 2:25. Lenders generally view anyone at 670 or higher as an acceptable, lower-risk borrower. You will get approved for most credit cards, car loans, and mortgages at reasonable rates. The average FICO score in the US in 2025 was 713 - right in the middle of the good range. A jump of a few points inside the same bucket (say, 675 to 690) usually does not change how a lender treats you. Crossing into a new bucket - from fair to good, or good to very good - is where you actually unlock better terms."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Learn the Five Factors That Move Your Score","text":"FICO calculates your score from five inputs. Watch the breakdown at 0:51. Payment history is the biggest at 35 percent - whether you pay your bills on time, every time. Amounts owed (your credit utilization) is 30 percent. Length of credit history is 15 percent. New credit applications make up 10 percent, and your credit mix (cards plus installment loans) is the final 10 percent. Two of these five factors account for two thirds of the math. Pay on time and keep your balances low and the rest will mostly take care of itself. Errors on your credit report can also drag the number down, so checking your report once a year matters."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Check Your Score for Free","text":"You never have to pay to see your credit score. Watch the free-check walkthrough at 4:23. The best free option is annualcreditreport.com - the only site officially authorized by federal law to give you your full credit report from all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Since the pandemic, all three bureaus offer the report weekly at no cost. For the actual score number, Credit Karma shows your VantageScore for free, most major bank apps (Chase, Capital One, Wells Fargo, Discover) show your FICO score on the dashboard, and Experian gives you your FICO 8 score directly. Check once a quarter at minimum. If you are about to apply for a big loan, check the week before."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Lower Your Credit Utilization Below 30 Percent","text":"If your score is below where you want it, the fastest fix is dropping your credit utilization. Watch the example at 1:25. Utilization is the percentage of your available credit you are using right now. Carry an $800 balance on a card with a $1,000 limit and you are at 80 percent - and your score will reflect that. Get that same balance to $300 and you drop to 30 percent. Below 30 is the rule of thumb most experts use, and getting under 10 percent is even better for your score. Utilization is calculated across all your revolving credit (cards plus personal lines of credit), so adding a second card or asking for a credit-limit increase on an existing card can drop the percentage without paying down a cent."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: See Why a Good Score Saves Real Money","text":"A good credit score is not just a number to brag about - it is real cash. Watch the interest-rate example at 3:15. Move from fair (580-669) to very good (740-799) and your mortgage rate could drop by two or three percentage points. On a $300,000 30-year mortgage, that single jump saves you over $100,000 in interest across the life of the loan. Auto loans are smaller dollars but the same percentage spread - a borrower with a 760 FICO often gets 4 to 6 points less than someone at 620 on the same car. Even auto insurance and rental applications pull your score in most states. Every cross-bucket jump unlocks money you can keep."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Recheck Your Score on a Schedule","text":"Your credit score is not a one-and-done. Watch the wrap-up at 4:25. Check once a quarter at minimum to catch errors, fraud, and identity theft early. Check the week before any big loan application so you know what rate you should be quoted. Pull your full report from annualcreditreport.com once a year (the law gives you free access). If you spot an account you do not recognize, dispute it with the bureau within 30 days - the bureau has to investigate. Stay on top of the number the way you stay on top of your weight: a quick check every few months, no panic, just keep it moving in the right direction."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-09T15:10:17.921Z","published":"2026-06-09T15:10:01.894Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}