Thursday, May 14, 2026
38.1 C
New Delhi

How Small Money Choices Shape Your Credit Score

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

A new year often comes with fresh money goals. Save more. Spend better. Pay off debt. One goal that is easy to overlook is improving your credit score. Yet it plays a role in many everyday decisions, from loan approvals and interest rates to insurance costs and even renting a home.

Credit scores do not improve overnight. They improve through small actions repeated consistently. With a few sensible habits, this year can become a steady reset for your credit health.

Pay Every Bill On Time

Timely payments matter more than anything else. Even one missed EMI or delayedcredit card payment can hurt your score. Make it a rule to pay all dues before the deadline. Setting reminders or using auto-debit can help. Once payments become routine, your credit record starts to strengthen on its own.

Keep Credit Card Spending In Check

Credit cards are useful, but they are easy to overuse. High balances can affect your credit score, even if you pay on time. Try to use only a small part of your available limit.

Staying under 30 per cent is a good benchmark. If you can, pay off card dues before the statement is generated. This keeps your reported balance low and helps avoid interest charges.

Check Your Credit Report, Not Just The Score

Many people track their credit score but never look at the report behind it. This is where errors can hide. Old dues, wrong account details, or payments marked late by mistake are more common than you might expect. Checking your credit report once or twice a year helps catch these issues early. If something looks wrong, raise a dispute. It is one of the easiest ways to protect your score.

Borrow Only When You Need To

Applying for multiple loans or credit cards in a short period can lower your score. Each application leaves a footprint, and too many at once can signal stress.

Before applying, pause and assess whether you really need the credit. Fewer applications mean fewer enquiries and a more stable credit profile.

Prepare For Surprises

Unexpected expenses are often the reason people fall behind on payments. Medical costs or sudden repairs can disrupt even a careful budget. An emergency fund helps absorb these shocks. Even a small buffer can keep you from missing payments or
leaning too heavily on credit cards.

Small Habits, Steady Progress

There is no quick fix for a better credit score. But steady habits go a long way. Pay on time. Use credit carefully. Stay informed. Borrow thoughtfully. Plan for emergencies.

Progress may be slow, but it tends to last. Over time, these small choices can quietly strengthen your credit score and give you greater financial confidence.

(The author is Associate Analyst, Communications at BankBazaar.com. This article has been published as part of a special arrangement with BankBazaar)

Go to Source

Hot this week

Visa cartel has its own visa temple: US Senator’s jibe at Chilkoor Balaji temple triggers row; ‘they are just praying’

US senator Eric Schmitt derides India’s ‘visa temple’ in his tirade against H-1B visa program. Read More

Vessel seized off UAE coast near Strait of Hormuz; another sinks off Oman after attack

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations centre said it received reports that the vessel was taken by unauthorized personnel while anchored 38 nautical miles northeast of the UAE port of Fujairah, near the Strait of Hormuz. Read More

Trump’s China Visit May Bring Massive Boeing Deal, New US-China Trade Framework

Trump visit to China may yield large Boeing orders and new trade frameworks, as both sides discuss boards on trade and investment. Read More

Health Secretary Wes Streeting Resigns: Will It Trigger A Leadership Crisis For UK PM Keir Starmer?

Wes Streeting Resigns: Wes Streeting said that it is now “clear” Keir Starmer will not lead Labour into the next general election. Read More

‘Didn’t Have To Fire A Missile Or Shut Hormuz’: Obama On How He Secured 2015 Iran Deal

Obama said the 2015 Iran nuclear deal was achieved through diplomacy without military action, and was backed by US and Israeli intelligence. Read More

Topics

Visa cartel has its own visa temple: US Senator’s jibe at Chilkoor Balaji temple triggers row; ‘they are just praying’

US senator Eric Schmitt derides India’s ‘visa temple’ in his tirade against H-1B visa program. Read More

Vessel seized off UAE coast near Strait of Hormuz; another sinks off Oman after attack

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations centre said it received reports that the vessel was taken by unauthorized personnel while anchored 38 nautical miles northeast of the UAE port of Fujairah, near the Strait of Hormuz. Read More

Trump’s China Visit May Bring Massive Boeing Deal, New US-China Trade Framework

Trump visit to China may yield large Boeing orders and new trade frameworks, as both sides discuss boards on trade and investment. Read More

Health Secretary Wes Streeting Resigns: Will It Trigger A Leadership Crisis For UK PM Keir Starmer?

Wes Streeting Resigns: Wes Streeting said that it is now “clear” Keir Starmer will not lead Labour into the next general election. Read More

‘Didn’t Have To Fire A Missile Or Shut Hormuz’: Obama On How He Secured 2015 Iran Deal

Obama said the 2015 Iran nuclear deal was achieved through diplomacy without military action, and was backed by US and Israeli intelligence. Read More

Flattery and fanfare as Trump welcomed to China – but thorny issues remain

President Xi has been eager to portray himself as a stable global leader in contrast to a mercurial US president. Read More

Former Nigerian minister sentenced to 75 years in rare corruption verdict

Former Power Minister Saleh Mamman was convicted last week – but the authorities do not know his whereabouts. Read More

Latvian PM resigns after row over stray Ukrainian drones

Drones bound for Russia crashed down in Latvia last week, prompting a political fallout. Read More

Related Articles