Written by: Courtney (she/her)
2 min read | Published: April 27, 2022
Between life events, pandemics, and unexpected emergencies, it’s not uncommon to be late on making a payment to a loan or credit card at some point during your lifetime. The impact of a late payment on your credit score will vary depending on a variety of factors including how late the payment is, your current score, and more. Keep reading to learn more about these factors and ways to help keep you on track.
Being a day late on a payment to a loan or credit card doesn’t mean the credit bureaus will know immediately. Actually, payments aren’t reported as past due to credit bureaus until they are 30 days late or more. The higher your credit score, the more a late payment can cause it to decline from missing one payment. Past due payments typically use the range below with the longer the payment is late, the higher the impact on your credit score.
Typically, once an item has gone long enough without a payment being made, the loan can be charged off or sold to a collection agency. Having a loan charged off doesn’t mean you no longer owe on the debt, but the lender no longer believes they will receive funds for the amount owed. This debt will still show on your credit report and will significantly bring down your credit standing. Items can also be sold to collection agencies where they will take over attempting to collect the past due amounts owed. You can expect to receive letters or phone calls by the collection agency once they take over your debt.
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Collegiate Credit Union accounts are held at Michigan State University Federal Credit Union where savings are federally insured to at least $250,000 by the NCUA and backed by the full faith and credit of the United States Government.
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