Mar 26
2007

How-To: Read Your Experian Credit Report

Tips for reading your credit report:

  1. Look for any misspellings / inaccuracies of your name, employer or address, past or present

  2. Read your credit summary closely, it will tell you what you’ll see in the full report.*

  3. Look through your Credit Inquiries, if you see anything you don’t recognize, you can dispute it.

  4. Finally, read your Account History, you can also dispute any of this if you don’t recognize it, or if you see inaccuracies in the reported information.

*What you will see in your summary…:

~Real Estate Accounts
~Revolving Accounts (Credit Cards, Department Store Accounts, Equipment Accounts, Etc.)
~Installment Accounts (Loans, Vehicle Loans, Etc.)
~Other Accounts
~Collection Accounts
~Total Accounts

Experian
Trans Union
Equifax

Mar 26
2007

How-To: Obtain Your Experian Credit Report

To be a wise consumer and make smart financial decisions, you need to be aware of your buying power, which is a combination of cash and credit available to you. Most people would prefer to use cash, and I think that’s smart, but in case of a crisis and you need to use your credit for any reason, you should know what you have to work with.

So you need to know how to get your credit report, we’ll use Experian as our example credit report company because they are the company I am most familiar with and have worked with the most, so I can take you through this step by step.

Here is a step by step guide through the experian call.

The number to call to get your credit report from them if you haven’t in the last year or you’ve been denied credit in the last three months is 1 888 EXPERIAN (1-888-397-3742)

~System (female voice) says it registers your zip code to help identify you when you call, for accuracy and privacy

~She’ll offer you a free trial package if you press 1
~Then press 2 for credit reports
~Then press 1 to get your personal report
~There’s a blurb
~States if you’ve been denied credit in the last 60 or some days to press 1
~To buy with credit card press 2
~With check or debit card press 3
~Press 4 for free disclosure of credit file.
If you press option 4 it tells you to go to a website to check eligibility to get it for
free, so push option 1 (I always did that whether I had recently been denied or not)

~Another blurb then it says if you want it by mail stay on the line - you have to do it this way if you want it free
~Then it asks for your social security number then press #
~It will repeat it back to you for verification; press 1 if right, wrong press 2
~Asks for your date of birth in the following format: 01011990, then press #; press 1 if right, wrong press 2
~Then it asks for your zip code then press #
~Asks for the numerical portion of your address (your house number) then press #
~Then it’ll give you a 9 digit confirmation number.

Mar 21
2007

More…

Posted by: Sabrina | 5 Comments | Link to this | Category: Editorial

I’ve expanded my about me section, those of you who are interested will find out more about me than a lot of people who know me personally know.  It’s hard to put yourself out there, for me anyways, I’m kind of a private person, don’t really like a lot of attention, but I guess that’ll have to change now that I have a site that will require “shameless self-promotion”, or so I’ve been told.  LOL :) 
So anyways, check it out, and comment often!

Mar 20
2007

Being in College doesn’t have to mean you are PREY!

Posted by: Sabrina | Leave a comment | Link to this | Category: Editorial, Informative, Top Tips & Tools

Money Management 101

Few college students have learned the difference between needs and wants.

The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts reported that about 1.6 million personal bankruptcies were filed in 2003, up 7.4 percent from 2002, suggesting that many adults haven’t learned the basics of personal finance either.

So it’s no surprise that many kids don’t know how to handle money. Their parents wanted only the best for their kids and, in most cases, provided it. But fiscal responsibility sometimes got lost between designer clothes, piano lessons and a cell phone.

Richard Boyum, professor emeritus of counseling and psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, says most students eventually master money management, but it often takes a few mistakes along the way.

“There are many opportunities to spend money and some students think of money as something to spend rather than as something to save,” Boyum says. “I once had a student show up in a new jacket. He said it was a $200 jacket, but he got it on sale and had ’saved’ $100. I said, ‘Show me the $100.’ I explained that he hadn’t saved $100, he’d spent $100. This surprises many students.’”

Some young adults have trouble with credit cards and view the credit limit as an invitation to spend what they consider to be their money. Boyum tells the students that credit comes from the bank — not grandma. For many, this is a revelation: Banks are in business to make money and customers have to pay interest on the balance if they miss the due date.

13 financial tips for college students

To see a slideshow, click here.
1. Use credit cards sparingly
2. Pay credit card balances in full
3. Get the best deal on a checking account
4. Start saving
5. Keep track of your spending
6. Set a limit on entertainment
7. Shop at second-hand stores
8. Keep an eye out for free money
9. Get a part-time job with tips
10. Walk or ride a bike — don’t drive
11. Avoid the tax on stupidity
12. Look for student discounts
13. Don’t eat out all the time

For some students, the concept of accrued interest on debt is as foreign as compound interest on savings. But the information is readily available when opening an account at Wells Fargo, Bank of America and J.P. Morgan Chase or any number of smaller banks.

Boyum urges students to use a debit rather than a credit card and to save the receipt. If a student has a credit card, he urges the kid to leave it at home and to not use it unless absolutely necessary. Racking up a fat bill for dinner and drinks with friends and putting it on the credit card isn’t a necessity, contrary to what many students believe on Friday and Saturday nights.

Boyum tells his students to do the math on small indulgences. Some say they only spend $20 a week on beer. Well, kids, that comes to $1,040 a year for Anheuser-Busch’s Budweiser and Adolph Coors Co.’s Coors. The total shocks most students.

Boyum urges his students to keep an accurate record of expenditures. Basic bookkeeping helps to keep spending in line and underscores the importance of writing a budget and sticking to it.

Work can teach students discipline and the value of a buck, but study should be a kid’s primary concern when in school. Some students work just for pocket money. This is a bad idea, especially when trying to wrap your mind around differential equations or Chaucer’s Middle English.

“I tell my students there are 168 hours in the week,” Boyum says. “There are 56 for sleep and 40 for school. That leaves 72 for other activities, including part-time jobs and socializing. Students are astonished by this and I tell them that time is their major resource.”

School days are a time for kids to figure out the basics. In addition to literature, math and science, they learn about sex, politics and how to organize their life.

“They’re young and they make mistakes,” Boyum says. “They learn from their mistakes and, on the whole, learn to manage their lives.”

I was the same way when I started college, completely ignorant to how any kind of money works. Credit, cash, bank accounts, totally ignorant. You’re really handicapped when you’re parents don’t help you out in that area, so I though it important to post these tips, because they can help everyone, not just students.

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