Module 3.2: What's on Your Credit Report?
Understand the 4 categories that make up your report and what each one means for your credit
Your Credit Report Explained
Your credit report is organized into 4 main categories. Understanding what's in each one helps you know what lenders see and why your credit score moves up or down. This module breaks down everything on your report in plain language.
The 4 Categories on Your Credit Report
Identification Information
Basic personal data that identifies you. This section contains your legal name, current and former addresses, date of birth, and Social Security number.
Credit History
Details about every credit account you have or had. This includes credit cards, loans, mortgages, and any other credit accounts. This section DIRECTLY affects your credit score.
Public Records
Legal information pulled from public court records. These are SERIOUS negative items that significantly damage your credit score. They stay on your report for 7-10 years.
Inquiries
A record of who has checked your credit report. There are two types: hard inquiries (when you apply for credit) and soft inquiries (background checks, pre-approvals). Only hard inquiries hurt your score.
What Each Item Means
Payment Status Codes
Your credit report uses codes to show your payment status on accounts:
30/60/90 Days Late: You missed the due date (BAD)
Charged Off: Creditor gave up collecting (VERY BAD)
In Collections: Sent to debt collector (VERY BAD)
Credit Utilization Ratio
How much of your available credit you're actually using. Calculated on credit cards and revolving accounts.
Good: Under 30%
Excellent: Under 10%
Bad: Over 50%
Account Age
How long you've had each account. Older accounts are better because they show a longer payment history.
Good: Accounts 5+ years old
Impact: Longer history = higher credit score
Hard Inquiry Impact
Each hard inquiry can lower your score by 5-10 points. Multiple inquiries in short time = bigger damage.
Impact: Most damage in first 3 months
Rule: Wait 3+ months between applications
Account Mix
Lenders like to see you can handle different types of credit responsibly.
Impacts: 10% of credit score
Shows: You can manage different credit types
Negative Item Timeline
Bad items eventually fall off your report if you wait long enough.
Collections: 7 years
Bankruptcy: 7-10 years
Tax liens: 7-10 years
🚩 Red Flags: What Really Hurts Your Score
Late Payments (30+ Days)
Missing your due date by 30 days or more. This immediately damages your score and stays on your report for 7 years.
Collections Account
Your account was sent to a debt collector because you didn't pay. This means you defaulted on the account.
Charge-Off
The creditor wrote off your debt as uncollectable. They gave up trying to collect, but you still legally owe it.
Bankruptcy Filing
You filed for legal bankruptcy protection. Chapter 7 (liquidation) or Chapter 13 (reorganization). This is nuclear.
Tax Lien or Judgment
A court ruled against you (judgment) or the IRS filed a lien for unpaid taxes. These are serious legal consequences.
High Credit Utilization (50%+)
Using more than half of your available credit limit. Signals to lenders that you're financially stressed.
⏱️ How Long Do Items Stay on Your Report?
Positive Account History
Good payment history stays on your report FOREVER (or until account closes, then 10 years). This helps you forever.
Hard Inquiries
Stay on your report for 2 years. Most damage happens in first 3 months, then impact decreases.
Late Payments (30, 60, 90+ days)
Stay on your report for 7 years from the date of the late payment. Older late payments hurt less.
Collections Accounts
Stay for 7 years from the original delinquency date (not from when sent to collections). Paying the collection doesn't remove it faster.
Charge-Offs
Stay for 7 years. Even if you later pay the debt, it still stays on your report for the full 7 years.
Bankruptcy
Chapter 7 (liquidation) stays 10 years. Chapter 13 (reorganization) stays 7 years from discharge date.
Tax Liens & Judgments
Stay on your report for 7-10 years. Paid liens may come off sooner, but unpaid stay the full term.
Foreclosures
Stay for 7 years from date of foreclosure. One of the most damaging items you can have.
✅ What to Do With This Information
🔑 Key Takeaways
4 Categories: Identification, Credit History, Public Records, and Inquiries. Each tells a different part of your financial story.
Credit History Matters Most: 35% of your score is payment history. Always pay on time. Use autopay.
Utilization is Fixable: High credit card balances hurt, but paying them down immediately helps. It's the fastest way to improve your score.
Red Flags Are Serious: Late payments, collections, charge-offs, bankruptcy = massive score damage. Avoid these at all costs.
Bad Items Fall Off: Most negative items stay 7 years. Late payments, collections, and charge-offs disappear after 7 years.
Check Annually: You get 1 free report per bureau per year. Use it. Check for errors and identity theft.
