DisputeSuite
|
Robert
Ellerman
|
Collection companies
have done a great job over the years of convincing consumers that paying off
collections will raise their credit scores. Many are actually surprised
to learn that paying off collections will actually lower their credit
scores.
Collections are usually
reported on the credit as a “9” status or collection account. This means the
account has already been "written off" and assigned to collections by
the creditor. Once an account is reported this way on the credit report,
the damage to the credit score is irreversible, unless that item is removed
completely from the report.
If the account is paid
off, the collection company reports that the account now has a $0 balance, but
they do not usually delete the item off the report. The account
has already become a collection, and the risk of the consumer defaulting on
another account is already very high, due to that collection.
So their credit score
will not go any higher if it is paid off, because paying off a collection
after the fact, doesn't lower the risk of defaulting in the future.
However, the DATE
OF LAST ACTIVITY is updated to the date the account was paid off. So if
that account was sent to collections 3 years ago, the date of last activity is
3 years old and the impact to the credit score is not as much. But if the
consumer pays off that collection today, they just update the date of last
activity to today's date, sometimes causing the scores to go DOWN as
a result.
Crazy isn't it? Your
clients are trying to do the right thing and pay off collections, but their
scores can be lower as a result.
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