Can You Have a 700 Credit Score With Collections?

The short answer is yes — a 700 credit score with collections on your report is possible. I’ve seen buyer profiles come through with exactly this situation: one or two old collections, otherwise clean payment history, decent account age, and a score sitting in the 690–720 range. It’s not ideal, and there are real limitations once you get to the underwriting stage of a mortgage or auto loan, but the number itself is achievable. Here’s what actually determines whether collections tank your score below 700 or don’t. Related: account information disputed by consumer — worth reading if this applies to you. Related: Credit Score Dropped 100 Points — worth reading if this applies to you.

Can you have a 700 Credit Score with Collections

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Income Based Loans: What They Are and Who Can Actually Use Them

The phrase income based loans gets used to describe two pretty different things: student loan repayment plans set by the federal government, and alternative personal loans where the lender puts heavier weight on your income than your credit score when deciding to approve you. Both are legitimate uses of the term. This post focuses on the personal loan version — what it means when a lender says they evaluate your income rather than your credit, and whether that’s actually a good deal.

income based loans

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Best Time to Apply for a Credit Card

The question comes up a lot from people who are trying to be strategic about their credit: is there a best time to apply for a credit card? The short answer is yes — but probably not for the reasons most articles give. It’s less about gaming bank marketing cycles and more about your own credit profile at the moment you apply. Get those fundamentals right and timing mostly takes care of itself.

Best time to apply for a credit card

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Sent to Collections Without Notice: What It Means

One of the more disorienting credit situations people describe is checking their report and finding a collection account they didn’t see coming — no warning letter, no phone call, just a collection showing up on all three bureaus. It happens. Whether it’s a legitimate notification failure or a legitimate debt you genuinely forgot about, the outcome is the same: a collection dragging your score down and sitting there for up to seven years. This post covers what to do when you’ve been sent to collections without notice and what your rights actually are. Related: do collection agencies report to credit bureaus — worth reading if this applies to you.

Sent to Collections Without Notice

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Using a Personal Credit Card for Business: What You Should Know

When I first started selling tradelines through my own site, I wasn’t running separate business and personal finances — it was all one big soup. The business expenses went on whatever card had room. It worked until it didn’t. The moment business spending started hitting my credit utilization in a meaningful way, I noticed my scores softening. Not dramatically, but enough that I paid attention. That experience is basically the whole case study for why using a personal credit card for business is a short-term convenience with real long-term tradeoffs.

using personal credit card for business
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