Life is harder for those with no credit–and more expensive too. Talk about being kicked when you’re already down–you’re already young and broke–now you can’t buy a house, rent a car, or even reserve a hotel room. You’ve got to have credit to get credit, and it’s harder to earn a nice credit rating when you have less money but everything costs more.
Fair, Isaac, the company that compiles our FICO scores, has created an expansion score, which is derived from non-traditional credit, including utility payments, layaway charges, and bank deposit records. However, this doesn’t completely solve the problem because in many places it’s illegal to report utility records and it can be difficult getting nontraditional creditors to bother reporting credit data (there isn’t anything in it for them and it does entail an expense).
Today the system has been improved further, allowing you to get your rental history included in your credit rating. By paying a small fee and registering with Payment Reporting Builds Credit, you can get credit for your payment history including daycare, cell phone, rent, and insurance payments. Fair Isaac promised that it will include data from RentBureau and PBRC when compiling your score.
Registering with PBRC, opening a secured credit card, and piggybacking as an authorized user on a relative’s account are all strategies that can accelerate the acquisition of a usable credit history for a young borrower. Of course, all this reporting doesn’t do you any good if what’s being reported isn’t favorable. So if you go through the trouble of getting your payment history recorded for posterity, make sure it’s worth recording.

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