1. Pay Your Bills on Time

Yes, it’s common sense, but it’s the single most important thing you can start doing to improve your score. “There’s about a 50-to-60 point shift when you’re able to pay all your debts on time,” says Sarah Davies, senior vice president of research, analytics and product development at credit scoring firm VantageScore. If you have a significant amount of revolving debt, pay as much down as you can afford. While paying down a card with a higher interest rate makes more sense from a budgetary standpoint, if your main goal is to raise your score, pay off the card with the balance closest to its limit. Davies says you ideally want to use no more than 30 percent of your credit limit at any given time. If you use even less, all the better.
2. Consider Debt Management Help

If your credit is shot because of unmanageable debts, a credit counseling organization can help you with a debt management plan. Many are non-profits, and the National Foundation for Credit Counseling has a list of member organizations that provide low-cost or free credit and budget assistance. Clients get an in-person or phone meeting with a counselor who goes over their income and expenses and helps them come up with a budget to get their personal finances back on track. Then, the counselor works with lenders of unsecured credit, like credit card companies, to get interest rates reduced and penalty fees lowered or eliminated. If you’re drowning in bills, reach out to a credit counseling group before your debts get charged off; if your debts have been sold off, credit counselors won’t negotiate with third-party collections agencies on your behalf.













