Your credit score is a three-digit number that determines what interest rates you qualify for, whether you get approved for loans and credit cards, and can even affect your insurance premiums and rental applications. Understanding where you fall on the credit spectrum—and what actions can help you move up—is essential for making smart financial decisions. Compare your score to the average credit score nationwide to see how you stack up.

FICO Credit Score Ranges

FICO scores range from 300 to 850, with higher scores indicating lower credit risk. Here’s how lenders typically categorize scores:

Score Range Rating What It Means
800–850 Exceptional Best rates and terms on everything. Virtually guaranteed approval.
740–799 Very Good Near-best rates. Easy approval for most products.
670–739 Good Competitive rates. Approved for most loans and cards.
580–669 Fair Higher rates. May face restrictions or require larger deposits.
300–579 Poor Difficulty getting approved. Very high rates when approved.

The average American FICO score is 715, which falls in the “Good” range.

VantageScore Ranges

VantageScore is a competing model used by some lenders:

Score Range Rating
781–850 Excellent
661–780 Good
601–660 Fair
500–600 Poor
300–499 Very Poor

VantageScore and FICO use the same 300-850 scale but categorize the ranges differently. Most lenders use FICO.

What Credit Score Do You Need For…

Mortgages

Loan Type Min. Score Best Rate Score Notes
Conventional 620 740+ Lower PMI cost with higher scores
FHA 580 (3.5% down) 740+ 500 possible with 10% down
VA No minimum* 740+ *Most lenders require 620+
USDA 640 740+ For rural and suburban areas
Jumbo 700–720 760+ Higher thresholds for larger loans

For home buyers, understanding what credit score you need to buy a house before starting your search can save months of frustration and help you prepare financially.

Credit Cards

Card Type Score Typically Needed
Secured credit card Any (300+)
Student credit card 600+
Store credit card 620+
Standard rewards card 670+
Premium travel card 720+
Ultra-premium (Amex Platinum, etc.) 740+

Auto Loans

Score Range Typical APR (New Car) Typical APR (Used Car)
781–850 4.8% 5.9%
661–780 6.4% 8.2%
601–660 9.5% 13.1%
501–600 13.2% 18.4%
300–500 16.5%+ 21.0%+

Personal Loans

Score Range Typical APR
720+ 8–12%
680–719 13–18%
640–679 18–24%
Below 640 25–36%

Renting an Apartment

Most landlords look for a minimum credit score of 620-650. In competitive rental markets (NYC, SF, Boston), landlords may prefer 700+.

How Much Credit Score Differences Actually Cost

The financial impact of your credit score is measurable in dollars:

Mortgage Example ($350,000, 30-Year Fixed)

Credit Score Rate Monthly Payment Total Interest Extra Cost vs. Best
760+ 6.50% $2,212 $446,320
700–759 6.72% $2,268 $466,480 $20,160
680–699 6.90% $2,314 $482,840 $36,520
660–679 7.11% $2,367 $502,120 $55,800
640–659 7.45% $2,454 $533,440 $87,120
620–639 8.09% $2,621 $593,560 $147,240

A score of 620 vs. 760 costs you $147,240 in extra interest on a single mortgage.

The lifetime cost of a lower credit score is staggering. Beyond mortgages, you’ll pay more for car loans, credit cards, personal loans, and even insurance in many states. Improving your score before major purchases should be a priority.

Insurance Premiums

Many states allow insurers to use credit-based insurance scores:

  • Excellent credit: Base rate
  • Good credit: 10-20% higher
  • Fair credit: 30-50% higher
  • Poor credit: 50-100% higher

This applies to auto insurance, homeowners insurance, and renters insurance.

How to Build From Poor to Good Credit

From Poor (300-579) to Fair (580-669): 3-12 months

  1. Get a secured credit card (deposit = credit limit)
  2. Use it for one small recurring charge
  3. Pay the full balance every month
  4. Dispute any errors on your credit report
  5. Become an authorized user on a family member’s oldest card

From Fair (580-669) to Good (670-739): 6-18 months

  1. Keep all utilization under 30% (aim for under 10%)
  2. Never miss a payment — set up autopay
  3. Avoid new credit applications
  4. Consider a credit-builder loan
  5. Keep old accounts open

From Good (670-739) to Very Good/Exceptional (740+): 12-24 months

  1. Maintain utilization under 10%
  2. Build a mix of credit types (cards + installment loan)
  3. Let your oldest accounts age
  4. Keep inquiries to a minimum
  5. Continue perfect payment history

For specific strategies on what causes score drops, see what hurts your credit score. Understanding both the positive and negative factors gives you better control over your financial future.

Auto Loan Rates by Credit Score 2026

Your credit score has an outsized impact on auto loan rates. A borrower with a 780 score may pay 3x less in interest than a borrower with a 580 score on the same car.

Credit Score Typical APR Monthly Payment ($30K/60mo) Total Interest
781–850 5.2% $571 $4,260
661–780 7.1% $595 $5,700
601–660 11.9% $665 $9,900
501–600 16.5% $730 $13,800
300–500 20.0%+ $793 $17,580

A 200-point score difference (580 vs. 780) costs over $13,000 more in interest on a single $30,000 auto loan.

Average Credit Score by Age 2026

Credit scores tend to rise with age as payment history lengthens and credit mix improves. Younger Americans face an inherent disadvantage simply because their credit files are new.

Age Group Average FICO Score Rating
18–24 679 Good
25–34 692 Good
35–44 706 Good
45–54 718 Good
55–64 740 Very Good
65+ 760 Very Good

If you’re under 35, don’t be discouraged by a lower score — building a strong foundation of on-time payments now will naturally raise your score over time. By your 40s, a 740+ score is achievable for most people who consistently pay bills on time.

How Credit Scores Affect Insurance Premiums

Most U.S. states allow insurers to use a credit-based insurance score (a variant of your regular credit score) when pricing auto and homeowner’s policies. The impact can be significant.

Credit Tier Auto Insurance Impact Homeowner’s Impact
Excellent (740+) Baseline / best rates Baseline
Good (670–739) +10% to +20% +10% to +15%
Fair (580–669) +30% to +50% +25% to +40%
Poor (below 580) +60% to +100%+ +50% to +100%+

A driver with poor credit can pay double what an otherwise identical driver with excellent credit pays for auto insurance. California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Michigan, and a few other states prohibit credit-based insurance scoring for auto insurance — but in most states, your credit score directly affects your premiums.

Practical impact: Improving your credit score from “Fair” to “Good” doesn’t just save you money on loans — it can reduce your annual auto and homeowner’s insurance premiums by $500–$1,500 per year. Over a decade, that’s $5,000–$15,000 in cumulative insurance savings on top of interest savings. This is why credit score improvement pays dividends far beyond simply qualifying for better loan rates.

Common Credit Score Myths

Myth: Checking your own credit hurts your score

Reality: Checking your own score is a “soft inquiry” and has zero impact. Only “hard inquiries” from lenders affect your score.

Myth: Closing old cards helps your score

Reality: Closing cards reduces your total available credit (increasing utilization) and shortens your average account age. Both hurt your score.

Myth: You need to carry a balance to build credit

Reality: You only need to use your card and pay it off. Carrying a balance just costs you interest — it provides no scoring benefit.

Myth: Income affects your credit score

Reality: Income is not a factor in any credit scoring model. However, income affects your ability to get approved for higher limits.

Myth: All debt is equally bad

Reality: Mortgage debt and installment loans in good standing can actually improve your credit mix (10% of your score).

How Long Negative Items Stay on Your Credit Report

Item Duration on Report Impact Over Time
Late payment (30+ days) 7 years Diminishes after 2 years
Collection account 7 years Less impact after being paid
Chapter 7 bankruptcy 10 years Major impact declines after 3-4 years
Chapter 13 bankruptcy 7 years Major impact declines after 2-3 years
Foreclosure 7 years Major impact declines after 2-3 years
Hard inquiry 2 years Only impacts score for 1 year
Tax lien (unpaid) Indefinite Resolved liens removed after 7 years

How to Check Which Score Model a Lender Uses

Different lenders pull different FICO score versions. Mortgage lenders typically use FICO 2, 4, and 5 (older models from each bureau). Auto lenders often use FICO Auto Score 8. Credit card issuers commonly use FICO Score 8 or 9. This means your score can vary by 20-50 points between the number shown on a free monitoring app (usually FICO 8) and what a mortgage lender actually sees. Before applying for a major loan, ask the lender which score version they use and consider pulling that specific version from MyFICO.com.

Where to Check Your Credit Score for Free

  • AnnualCreditReport.com — Free weekly credit reports from all three bureaus
  • Credit Karma — Free VantageScore from TransUnion and Equifax
  • Your bank or credit card — Most major banks now provide free FICO scores
  • Discover Credit Scorecard — Free FICO score (no Discover account needed)
  • Experian — Free FICO Score 8

Related: Average Credit Score in America | Average American Debt | Average Credit Card Debt by State | Net Worth Percentile Calculator

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy