Credit utilization — how much of your available revolving credit you’re using — accounts for 30% of your FICO credit score. It’s the second-largest scoring factor after payment history, and unlike payment history, it can be improved in as little as 30 days by paying down balances.
How Credit Utilization Is Calculated
Overall utilization = Total balances ÷ Total credit limits
Per-card utilization = Individual card balance ÷ Individual card limit
Example:
| Card | Balance | Limit | Card Utilization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Card A | $1,500 | $5,000 | 30% |
| Card B | $500 | $3,000 | 17% |
| Card C | $200 | $2,000 | 10% |
| Total | $2,200 | $10,000 | 22% |
FICO considers both your overall utilization (22% here) and individual card utilization (30% on Card A is flagged). High utilization on even one card can hurt your score even if the others are low.
Utilization and Credit Score Impact
| Utilization | Score Impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0% | Slight ding | Score slightly lower than 1-9% |
| 1–9% | Maximum points | Sweet spot for score optimization |
| 10–29% | Minor negative | Still qualifies as “low” |
| 30–49% | Moderate damage | Score drops noticeably here |
| 50–74% | Significant damage | -30 to -60 points |
| 75–99% | Major damage | Score plummets |
| 100%+ (over limit) | Severe damage | Emergency: pay immediately |
People with FICO scores of 800+ average under 7% utilization. The national average is around 28%.
Why the 30% Rule Is the Floor, Not the Goal
You’ll often hear “keep utilization under 30%.” That threshold avoids the steepest score penalties, but it’s not the target — it’s the minimum. FICO’s own data shows that scores above 760 are associated with utilization consistently under 10%.
Think of it this way:
- Under 30% = passing grade
- Under 10% = A+
How to Lower Your Credit Utilization
Method 1: Pay Down Balances (Fastest)
Paying off credit card debt reduces your numerator (balances). The score improvement shows in your next reporting cycle — typically 30–60 days after the new lower balance is reported.
Example: Card with $3,000 balance on $10,000 limit (30% util). Pay it to $500 (5% util). Score boost: +20–40 points.
Method 2: Request a Credit Limit Increase (No New Account)
Increasing your limit without increasing your balance reduces utilization immediately.
Example: $2,000 balance on $5,000 limit = 40% util. Request increase to $10,000 → same $2,000 balance = 20% util.
Most issuers allow a soft-pull credit limit increase request every 6–12 months. Call or request through the app.
Method 3: Pay Before Your Statement Closes
Your utilization is reported based on your statement balance — not what you owe at the end of the month.
Timing: Pay down your balance before your statement closing date (not just before the due date). If your statement closes on the 20th, pay on the 18th–19th. The balance reported to the bureaus will be lower.
Method 4: Spread Spending Across Cards
Using multiple cards with low individual balances keeps per-card utilization low.
Instead of: $2,000 on one card with $3,000 limit (67% — damaging) Try: $700 on Card A ($3,000 limit = 23%) + $700 on Card B ($3,000 limit = 23%) + $600 on Card C ($2,000 limit = 30%)
Method 5: Open a New Card (Use Carefully)
A new card increases your total available credit, lowering overall utilization — but the new card also creates a hard inquiry (-5 to -10 points) and lowers your average account age. Only do this if the utilization improvement outweighs these negatives.
Common Utilization Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Hurts | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Carrying a high balance on one card | Per-card utilization triggers even if overall is low | Pay down that specific card |
| Closing old unused cards | Removes available credit, spikes utilization | Keep old cards open with tiny occasional charges |
| Paying the minimum | Balance stays high, utilization stays high | Pay as much as possible each month |
| Putting large purchases on one card | Spikes utilization for 30 days until you pay | Split purchases across cards or pay before statement |
Utilization Is Temporary — It Updates Monthly
Unlike late payments (which stay on your report for 7 years), utilization is not historical. It reflects your current balance relative to your current limit. Pay down your balances and your score can recover in one reporting cycle.
This makes utilization the most actionable lever for a quick score improvement before a major credit event (mortgage application, car purchase).
Related Guides
- What Is a Good Credit Score?
- How to Improve Your Credit Score
- Soft vs. Hard Credit Inquiry
- How to Build Credit from Scratch
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