Do student loans affect your credit score?
Student loans can hurt or help your credit. If you make on-time payments, it can help boost your credit score over time. But missing a payment can cause a significant drop in your score. Depending on the type of student loan you have though, you may be given additional time to make a payment before your late payment is reported to the credit bureaus.
Understanding what steps you can take if you can’t afford to make a payment can help you avoid a major blow to your credit.
How do student loans affect your credit score?
A student loan can impact your credit in a few ways.
Positive impacts
While many students take on student loans before they have an established credit history, student loans can help boost a credit score over time. Some of the benefits include:
- Positive payment history: As with any other type of credit, if you make your monthly payments on time and in full, they will help you build and maintain good credit. In fact, your payment history makes up 35 percent of your FICO Score, so it’s crucial that you stay on track.
- Good credit mix: Lenders like to see that you can manage different types of credit. In other words, having a student loan and a credit card is generally better than having two credit cards. Your credit mix accounts for 10 percent of your FICO Score.
- Long credit history: Many recent graduates may not have had the chance yet to establish their credit history, and having student loans helps with that. And because student loans typically have repayment plans that can last from 10 to 30 years, they can help lengthen your credit history, a factor that makes up 15 percent of your FICO Score.
Negative impacts
Like other types of debt, student loans do have the potential to lower your credit score both temporarily and over the long term. Some of the downsides to consider are:
- Credit inquiry: Most federal student loan borrowers don’t undergo a credit check when they apply for loans, but if you apply for private student loans or student loan refinancing, the lender will typically run a hard inquiry on one or more of your credit reports. This will temporarily ding your credit score, although FICO says that each additional hard inquiry lowers your credit score by fewer than five points.
- Negative payment history: If you miss a debt payment for private student loans by 30 days or more or 90 days or more for a federal student loan, the lender will generally report it to the national credit bureaus. Because your payment history is the most influential factor in your FICO Score, missing even one payment can be devastating for your credit score. It’ll remain on your credit reports for seven years.
- Delayed benefits: It may surprise some college students that student loans won’t make a huge impact on their credit history until they start making payments after graduation. While student loans will show up on your credit report shortly after you receive the loan funds, the biggest benefits come from timely payments, which many students don’t start making until six months after graduation.
How do student loans affect a co-signer’s credit score?
If you’re applying for private student loans or student loan refinancing, your credit may not yet be in good-enough shape to get approved on your own. In this instance, you may ask a family member to act as a co-signer on your loan application.
In general, student loans impact a co-signer’s credit score in the exact same way as they do the primary borrower’s. This is because, as the co-signer, you’re guaranteeing that you’ll make payments on the debt if the primary borrower doesn’t.
- Hard credit check: When you submit the application, the lender will run a hard inquiry on both applicants’ credit reports.
Missed payments. While on-time payments will help boost the co-signer’s credit score, a missed one could damage their score significantly. This result can be especially frustrating for a co-signer who was just helping the primary borrower get approved.
When you submit the application, the lender will run a hard inquiry on both applicants’ credit reports. And while on-time payments will help boost the co-signer’s credit score, a missed one could damage their score significantly. This result can be especially frustrating for a co-signer who was just helping the primary borrower get approved.
Beyond credit score, it’s also important to note that the student loan debt will show up on co-signer’s credit reports as if it’s their own. This means that when they apply for credit — especially a mortgage— their debt-to-income ratio will include that payment, even if they’re not making it.
As such, it’s crucial that any co-signers consider the benefits and the drawbacks before agreeing to help.
How does student loan forbearance affect your credit score?
If you’re struggling to keep up with your monthly payments, forbearance can pause your monthly payments, typically for a few months at a time.
Because you and your loan servicer or lender have agreed to skip payments during this period, the forbearance won’t impact your credit score negatively. However, if you miss any payments after the forbearance period ends, it could damage your credit score.
Also, note that while forbearance can put your payments on hold, interest will continue to accrue and can increase your loan balance and monthly payment going forward.
How does student loan forgiveness affect your credit score?
The credit score impacts of student loan forgiveness can depend on the type of forgiveness you receive. If you achieve only partial forgiveness, your loan will still be open, so there won’t be any direct impact on your credit score.
If you receive full forgiveness, however, it’ll close your loan accounts, which can affect your credit score — since you’ll have one fewer account on your record and the average age of your accounts could decrease. That said, the benefits of forgiveness far outweigh the potential drawbacks to your credit, and the negative impact of closing a credit account is generally temporary and small.
The bottom line
As long as you repay your student loan as promised, it’ll have a positive impact on your credit score over time. But failing to do so can cause significant harm to your credit. If you’re having trouble making payments, contact your loan servicer as soon as possible to inquire about forbearance or deferment. These two options allow you to temporarily pause your payments to avoid a negative impact on your credit. As an alternative, you could ask your student loan servicer to temporarily lower your payments.
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