Free 30 Day Trial for MyFico Score

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
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I signed up and used the service for the past couple of weeks and have been extremely happy with it. Since Fico is the score most lenders use to determine your interest rates/risk, it's probably the best one to keep tabs on.


Link to Free Trial
 

Robor

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
16,979
0
76
Yeah but...

"A week before your 30-day trial expires, we will contact you by email to confirm that you wish to convert your trial to an annual subscription. If you do not cancel prior to the end of the 30-day trial, you will be billed at the annual subscription rate of $79.95 when the 30-day trial expires."

What if they don't contact you or if their Email gets blocked as spam? I know me - I'll forget and wind up paying $80 for it.
 

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
1
81
Originally posted by: Robor
Yeah but...

"A week before your 30-day trial expires, we will contact you by email to confirm that you wish to convert your trial to an annual subscription. If you do not cancel prior to the end of the 30-day trial, you will be billed at the annual subscription rate of $79.95 when the 30-day trial expires."

What if they don't contact you or if their Email gets blocked as spam? I know me - I'll forget and wind up paying $80 for it.

Link to Cancel :)
 

Robor

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
16,979
0
76
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
Originally posted by: Robor
Yeah but...

"A week before your 30-day trial expires, we will contact you by email to confirm that you wish to convert your trial to an annual subscription. If you do not cancel prior to the end of the 30-day trial, you will be billed at the annual subscription rate of $79.95 when the 30-day trial expires."

What if they don't contact you or if their Email gets blocked as spam? I know me - I'll forget and wind up paying $80 for it.

Link to Cancel :)

Sweet - Now I'm in! Thanks! :D
 

Injury

Lifer
Jul 19, 2004
13,066
2
81
What about the 2nd checkbox before submitting info... the one that asks you to opt-in to some program? Is that required, or junk?

Edit: It's junk. Un-check that box!
 

Aztech

Golden Member
Jan 19, 2002
1,922
0
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That's the place to get your free credit report from all three bureaus. But I don't think it includes your credit (FICO) score.

 

toolfan

Senior member
Oct 11, 1999
285
0
76
Originally posted by: Aztech
That's the place to get your free credit report from all three bureaus. But I don't think it includes your credit (FICO) score.


Correct, that does not include your FICO score, just the reports. Nice if you don't need the actual score and are just interested in looking at your reports though.
 

Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
12,837
2,621
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I think way2trivial is correct. While your FICO score is important to a lender, what is far more important to you as a borrower is that the RAW DATA that makes up your credit report is accurate and correct.

Once you have confirmed your data is correct (through the free credit reports linked above, a very excellent source) you can then sit down with someone at your local branch bank to figure out what your FICO is (if you are really all that interested in it) or much more importantly, what concrete steps you need to take to improve your credit rating. You will have built/improved a link with a actual person in the loan industry who can do you a lot of good, and avoided the risk of being shafted by an opt-out program.

Everyone should definately get, and review throughly, their free credit reports. But Iwouldn't fall for this FICO opt-out thing.
 

robby69

Member
Feb 14, 2005
36
0
0
The higher the number, the better credit risk you are.

Score Range Number of loans"good vs. *bad
Below 600, odd to a lender are 8 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.
700-719, odds to a lender are 123 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.
Above 800 odds are 1,292 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.

The higher your FICO score, the less interest you will pay on a loan because you are a better credit risk.

Generally you FICO score is only a problem to you if it falls below 680. As long as your FICO is above 680, you probably won't pay more than 0.125% more than someone with say an 800 rating.
 

regpfj

Golden Member
Nov 1, 2005
1,024
0
76
Originally posted by: robby69
The higher the number, the better credit risk you are.

Score Range Number of loans"good vs. *bad
Below 600, odd to a lender are 8 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.
700-719, odds to a lender are 123 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.
Above 800 odds are 1,292 to 1 against defaulting on a loan.

The higher your FICO score, the less interest you will pay on a loan because you are a better credit risk.

Generally you FICO score is only a problem to you if it falls below 680. As long as your FICO is above 680, you probably won't pay more than 0.125% more than someone with say an 800 rating.

I've never heard of the odds thing, robby. That's interesting - where'd you come by that information?

On topic - good find op, a $6 value for free. :thumbsup: Just don't forget to cancel.
 

addikt1337

Member
Dec 12, 2005
92
0
0
Depending on which of the 3 I loook at, it's 760-792, with the 760 being the better barometer (I think that is Equifax). Before buying the last 2 homes, I had a score of 807 through Equifax, but haven't yet recovered from the home purchase 15 months ago. It takes a little while when you put that many 0s on your credit history as an active loan. Meh.

I wish this had come around last month when I bought my score from the 3 agencies. That said, TransUnion is worthless. They give you the least information, and with their score range, you can have an outstanding score, but they still consider you a poor risk. Case in point. They give me a 792 out of a possible 950 and rate me as a 'poor risk', while Equifax in the past giving me the >800 (possible 850) score and my qualifying for loans before all the cumberson paperwork. I'd be curious which companies out there actually use them to make loan decisions.
 

elph

Senior member
Apr 1, 2000
448
0
76
Get the paypal credit card and use the providian site... free monthly credit score for life.
 

mastermynd27

Member
Dec 24, 2001
82
0
0
be wary that they will NOT send you the email to cancel 10 days before your free month is up, so keep that cancellation link handy
 

zikronix

Golden Member
Nov 12, 2002
1,324
0
0
they sent me an email telling me that my time was almost up they sent it on the 30th my time expires on the 9th


thats 10 days
 

Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
12,837
2,621
136
Shortly after this was posted it was reported in the news that FICO is being replaced by something called Vantagescore. As I posted above, I personally think knowing your FICO score is of little real value to consumers. That's even more true now.

This deal, with its thirty day opt out provision, has been offered for years and I doubt it will end anytime soon. It's a great moneymaker for the companies involved.