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CIBIL Score - A Practical Guide

SSV

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CIBIL Score - A Practical Guide

Discalimer: This is mainly for regular Credt Card users who pay all their dues before due date and wondering why their score is not increasing..
Here we dont discuss the cases where there were defaults and / or delayed payments..that is for another day..​

Ladies and Gentelmen,

Here is the much awaited post on CIBIL Score and how it works and what we should do to improve it over the period of the time..

Here I won't go in detail about how the score is constructed as there were numerous posts on the internet in explaining the CIBIL score in an academic way..
Here we will concentrate more on practical things..

Lets get started..

CIBIL Score's main constituents:

1) Payment History
2) Utilisation
3) Number of Enquiries in the recent past
4) Credit age..
5) Credit Mix

1) Payment History

We should pay all dues before the due date in order to have an excellent score and minimum fainancial burden on us.. This many of us do anyway..

TIP: we should atleast pay Minimum Amount Due( MAD) before the due date atleast - this will safeguard the score,
but will impact us financially if we pay only MAD and leave the rest...

Best practice:
1) Pay MAD immediately after the bill is generated - This will protect the score, in case you failed to pay the full before due date.
2) Pay the full amount due at least 5 days before due date. - ideal case scenario.
3) Pay the full amount even before the bill generations / month end- the best case scenario- will discuss this in detail at the end..

2) Utilisation

There is a notion that if we have <30% overall utilisation then it is good..
Lets dig deep into this..

The prinicple is : the higher the utilisation ratio, the lower the score.. and vice versa ...Period..
So, the aim should be the utilisation ratio should be as minimal as possible. ( it can even go into -ve, this is the best case scenario)..

How this works practically:
It works in range bound basis: like 0 to 10 % , 10 - 20 % and 20 - 30% etc.
Note: these exact range numbers are hypothitical.. trying to explain the logic...
For example: 0- 10% utilisation ratio will have better score than 10- 20% and
10- 20% utilisation ratio will have better score than 20- 30% ratio..

Once it crosses 30% utilisation ratio it will have big negative impact on the score.. hence need to maitain less than 30% ratio to have a decent score.

Tip:
This uitlisation ratio is calculated both on
1) overall basis ( on all accounts together) and
2) Individual account level basis..

Both of the above ratios will have their weightage in the score construction.

Example:
You have 10 accounts with a total of 10 Lakhs sanctioned limit and total utilisation of 2 Lakhs
Here the overall utilisation is: 20%, which is okay as it is under 30%..
But if one of the accounts has 50% utilisation ( ie, one account which has 1L limit and utilsation with 50K).
In this case , score will have big negative impact even though your overall is less than 30%...

BEST practice:

Make sure each and every account utilisation is less than 30% to start with
and as low as possible to have as better score as possible.. ( It can go to negative as well .. this is the best possible scenario)...

3) Number of Enquiries

This is where a lot of people have confusion..

The basic rule:
The longer the credit history , the lesser the impact of number of enquiries on the Credit score...

In practical terms:
Once your credit history crosses the age of 5 years, the no. of enquiries' negative impact diminishes..

Say if you have 6 years of credit history, then 5 or 10 enquireis in the past 1 to 3 months will not have any impact on the score.

If your credit history crosses 10 - 15 years , you can safely forget about the concept of number of enquiries...

TIP:
Even if your credit score is impacted because of no of enquiries, the score will recover pretty fast ie. within 2 to 3 months.
Only people with less than 5 years of credit history should be careful about the no of enquiries..


4) Credit age

The longer the Credit age the better the score and score's stability...
For a person who has a credit age of 15 to 20 years, the fluctuation in his/ her score is very minimal...

Again, after the age of 5 years , the score will get a bit of the boost and started to get stabilised..
Obviously the more older the credit profile the better.
when you are trying to close your oldest credit card account, please check what is the second oldest account's age, if it is more than 5 years, no need to worry..

TIP:
Check score predictor in the offical CIBIL app and predict your score by selecting the oldest card's closure.. this will give a very accurate prediction in my experience.

5) Credit Mix

Obviously, a mix of sceured and unsecured loans is a better indicator rather than having only unsecured loans...

However, what I observed in practice, except for Home loan all other Secured loans have no / minimal postive impact on the score..

Home Loan- will definitely improve your score by around 10 points.
Gold Loan and Loan against FD - have no positive impact on the score in my experience. in fact it had a negative impact as it is carrying some current balances..
Auto Loan - also may not have a positive impact..

Now coming to some other interesting bits:


SSV's Pro Tip:

1) Make current balances <=0 on each and every account as on Reporting Date ..


Maitain 0 or negative current balances on all accounts to get a boost of about 10 points to your score
Then you may ask what is the purpose of having 45 /50 days of free credit period..
Correct. this may not be useful for those who want to utilise full free credit days, but for those who want to boost their credit score for any other purposes temporarily this is one of the great tools which is in our hand..
I will also tell how to get this 0 utlisation along with availing free credit period to some extent for some bank credit cards..

We all know that different banks report balances on different dates.
We classify them as banks reporting balances as on
1) month end
2) bill generation date

The KEY here is current balances as on REPORTING Date ...
This Reproting date can be month end or bill generation date depending upon the bank.

1) For those that report balances as on month end ie.
AXIS, BOB, HDFC, HSBC, IndusInd, IDFC, Kotak, RBL , Stan C, YES ........
For these banks, make sure your due date falls on 1st of every month, so that means, your statement generation datee should be around 14th of every month so that bill DUE date is around 1st or 2nd of the following month...

In this case, you can have your full amount outstanding as on 14 th, but pay the full amount by 30th of every month..
So at the end, your current oustanding balances should <= 0 as on 30th.. this solves the issue.

2) For those banks who report on bill generation date, there is no escape: you have to pay just before bill generation date and make sure bill amount is <= 0,,,


2) HIGH Credit in CIBIL report:

There is one data item called " HIGH credit " in CIBIL report..
what it means : the highest amount used / billed in any credit account during the life time of that account...

This generally doesn't have any direct impact on the credit score except in the cases of charge cards like amex Gold, Platinum cards etc where there is no set sanctioned limit..
This was applicable until recentlty on HDFC cards as well, but HFDC now reports sanctioned limits to credit bureaus..

However, this data item potentially will be useful for lenders to know more about us with regard to
1) Potential high spender
2) giving better credit limits at the time of application..

I am not sure if the Indian lenders are incorporating this in their credit card application evaluation as of now.. I am sure in future they may use this..

How this should work:
Total amount used ie. debited duiring a staetment period should reprorted as HIGH Credit to the bureaus..

Scenario 1:
Take a case of what I generally do:

I have a card with sanctioned limit of 5L and I use it for 2L in one month and pay in full before the bill generation date.
This is how it will be reprted in this case:

Sanctioned Limit: 5L
High Limit : 2L
Current Balance : 0

This stat should WOW a potential lender towards me.. Why?
I am using 40% of sanctioned limit and paying in full back to account before the bill generation.
Means I am a high spender and very obedient in paying back before bill generation date..
and hence they should love to give me their card with generous limits..

Scenario 2:
Take another example of oppostie side:

Sacntioned limit: 5L
High limit :20K
current balance: 20K

In this case, Bank is wasting sanctioned limit on this person, as he is only using 4% of sacntioned limit ..
So , in this case this customer is not a high spender ( hence not much income to the Bank) and there is no point in giving him higher limits as well ..

As per my observation only SBI and Amex is reprortng this HIGH limit correctly in true sense.
(--EDIT: YES bank is also doing the same as per @reach2dpg )
ie.
same example:
spends of 2L , paying full before bill generation:
SBI and AMEX reported
as CL :5L
High Limit 2L and
Curre balance : 0

where as all other banks reported as
CL :5L
High Limit : 0 and
Curr Balance :0..

For other banks to report correct high limit ,we need to have full balance outstanindg as on bill generation date at least for one statement period....

Look at the example of my ICICI account

1721309965192.webp

In the above example, my highest bill oustanding duirng one statement period was 2.15 L out of 7.7L sanctioned amount ..and current balance is Zero..
Means I am a good boy. A high spender who pays bills before bill generation.. Banks would love persons like these...

So, with regard to HIGH limit:
My TIP:


Use your card just once for a very big amount and get it reported as HIGH limit , and from then on-wards use as per your normal usage...


This post became too big..but I wanted to share all my knowledge as far as CIBIL score is concerned..

All the best guys...

Have fun
Enjoy.....
 
Last edited:
Tip:
This uitlisation ratio is calculated both on
1) overall basis ( on all accounts together) and
2) Individual account level basis..
For the first time in 10+ years
  1. My overall utilization has crossed 1% and gone to 2%
  2. Individual account level has crossed 30% and gone to 38% for one account
And yet, for the first time in 5 years my CIBIL has crossed 807 and gone to 809 is Sep 2024.

How to explain this?
 
For the first time in 10+ years
  1. My overall utilization has crossed 1% and gone to 2%
  2. Individual account level has crossed 30% and gone to 38% for one account
And yet, for the first time in 5 years my CIBIL has crossed 807 and gone to 809 is Sep 2024.

How to explain this?
Has the said utilisation been reported to CIBIL or its just your current stats? The moment it'll be reported, your Score will drop in the range of 15 points for sure.
 
For the first time in 10+ years
  1. My overall utilization has crossed 1% and gone to 2%
  2. Individual account level has crossed 30% and gone to 38% for one account
And yet, for the first time in 5 years my CIBIL has crossed 807 and gone to 809 is Sep 2024.

How to explain this?
I had Flipkart and Amazon BNPL during college, the accounts were still active even after I got credit card. Decided to close those in March this year, was hopeful that cibil score would increase, or at least be the same. But, before closing the CIBIL was 795, after that it's hovering between 774-782. No new inquiries, utilisation is consistent, even lesser than it was in March.
 
For the first time in 10+ years
  1. My overall utilization has crossed 1% and gone to 2%
  2. Individual account level has crossed 30% and gone to 38% for one account
And yet, for the first time in 5 years my CIBIL has crossed 807 and gone to 809 is Sep 2024.

How to explain this?
Do you have an active home loan?
How long you have been observing your score?
How frequently you run the CIBIL report?


In my case , I have been running CIBIL report on daily basis (99%) for the past 5 years or so..
and I never had a home loan..


CIBIL algo is very complex and it depends on various factors.. that doesn’t mean that we can not try to simplify it for general consumption with some exceptions…

Okay let’s dig deep into it to find out why it is acting the way it is acting for you
 
NO

Past 5-7 years

I don't have CIBIL account. Run it 3-4 times a month from various free sites.
okay .. wait for another 1 or 2 months and observe the facts..

and also please save the complte reports PDFs.. we will analyse 3 months later by looking at the different reports..
we may miss out on a few things while analysing visually..
if we save reports for the coming 3 months or so by saving complete reports then looking deep into them at a later stage then we will have more chances of identifying the critcial aspects of the score..
 
I just bought CIBIL Membership for my dad's account and it's showing as NH in score.

He has credit history of 16y8m according to the app also had 5 CC that are closed.
Axis - ₹2,06,000
SBI - ₹56,000
Kotak - ₹1,48,000
Kotak - ₹49,000
Kotak - ₹1,48,000

Can anyone help me understand why is this showing up?

He has no active CC/loan nothing. Last card was axis that was closed in 2020.

I'm thinking to apply for new cards so can I or should I do something else before applying.
 
I just bought CIBIL Membership for my dad's account and it's showing as NH in score.

He has credit history of 16y8m according to the app also had 5 CC that are closed.
Axis - ₹2,06,000
SBI - ₹56,000
Kotak - ₹1,48,000
Kotak - ₹49,000
Kotak - ₹1,48,000

Can anyone help me understand why is this showing up?

He has no active CC/loan nothing. Last card was axis that was closed in 2020.

I'm thinking to apply for new cards so can I or should I do something else before applying.
If you don't have any credit account active in the last 36 months, CIBIL will reset to 0. You will have to start from scratch.

This is what I know
 
I guess we have 3 checkpoints
0, <10% and <30%

Usually mine stays < 10, score kept increasing, but when it went to 11, score decreased instead.

Well could be other factors too, it was a very small decrease so could be fluctuation but this seemed plausible to me
 
What are the possible effects of a Two Wheeler Loan on cibil profile? Is it negative or positive to some extent? @SSV or maybe someone else who has experienced this can let me know?
you can try using CIBIL simulator by adding " auto Loan" and see what it says..

Long term it will have no real big impact either on positive or negative side..
Overall, I say kind of neutral... try the simulator first, it will generally guide you in the right direction...
 
you can try using CIBIL simulator by adding " auto Loan" and see what it says..

Long term it will have no real big impact either on positive or negative side..
Overall, I say kind of neutral... try the simulator first, it will generally guide you in the right direction...
Tried that already, doesn't really show anything substantial but a 1 point drop
 
My cibil is same since 2021 it's neither increasing nor decreasing i.e. 793.

Took home loan in 2022 and closed in 2023.

Took 2 CC in 2023 and 4 in 2024 had more than 20+ cibil inquires this year and last year as well but this doesn't effect my score positively or negatively.

Credit history is 14+ years now.

Any expert advice to increase that above 800?
 
My cibil is same since 2021 it's neither increasing nor decreasing i.e. 793.

Took home loan in 2022 and closed in 2023.

Took 2 CC in 2023 and 4 in 2024 had more than 20+ cibil inquires this year and last year as well but this doesn't effect my score positively or negatively.

Credit history is 14+ years now.

Any expert advice to increase that above 800?
Dude you closed home loan in a year?
 
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