Identifying What's Hurting Your Credit
Before taking steps to improve your credit score, it is crucial to conduct a precise diagnosis of the factors dragging it down. Each negative element on your file does not carry the same weight or have the same duration of impact. Understanding the hierarchy of these factors will allow you to focus your efforts on the elements that will have the greatest positive effect and optimize your preparation before a mortgage application with a lender in Canada.
Payment History: The Dominant Factor
Your payment history represents approximately 35% of your Beacon credit score at Equifax. It is the most heavily weighted factor in your score calculation. A 30-day late payment on a single account can cause a drop of 60 to 100 points, depending on your overall profile. The longer the delinquency (60, 90, 120 days and beyond), the more severe the impact. Additionally, recent late payments weigh more heavily than older ones. A-lenders in Canada generally require no late payments in the last 12 to 24 months for best-rate approvals.
Credit Utilization: The Invisible Trap
Credit utilization, the ratio of your balances to your credit limits, accounts for approximately 30% of your score. Even if you religiously pay the full balance each month, the timing of your statement can work against you. Creditors typically report your balance on the statement date, not after receiving your payment. If your limit is $10,000 and your balance at statement date is $5,000, your utilization shows as 50%, which is considered high by mortgage lenders.
- Utilization of 0% to 10%: excellent signal for lenders. Shows you have access to credit but do not depend on it.
- Utilization of 10% to 30%: healthy zone. Most credit experts recommend staying below this threshold.
- Utilization of 30% to 50%: warning zone. Begins to negatively affect your score.
- Utilization of 50% to 75%: significant negative impact. A-lenders may hesitate.
- Utilization above 75%: major red flag. Significant score drop and perception of credit dependency.
Collection Accounts and Public Records
Accounts transferred to collection agencies are among the most severe marks on your credit file. In Quebec, a collection remains on file for six years from the date of the last default. Even an amount as modest as $50 from a forgotten phone bill or utility account can result in a mortgage denial or require additional conditions from the lender. Court judgments, seizures, and bankruptcies are recorded in the public records section of your report and constitute the most damaging entries for your borrower profile.
Other Often-Overlooked Negative Factors
Certain lesser-known factors can also hurt your score. Closing an old credit account shortens the average length of your credit history (approximately 15% of your score) and reduces your total available credit. Having only one type of credit (for example, only credit cards) penalizes the diversity of your profile (approximately 10% of your score). Multiple credit applications, if not grouped within the 14-day mortgage shopping window, add up and reduce your score by 5 to 10 points each. Finally, a complete absence of credit is also an obstacle, as mortgage lenders have no basis to evaluate your repayment behaviour.