What's not in a credit bureau score?
...or continue to "What are the types of credit scores?"
How are scores are calculated?
What's in a credit bureau score?
What's not in a credit bureau score?
What are the types of credit scores?
Credit bureau-based scores, like those generated by Experian, cannot use demographics prohibited under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, such as race, color, religion, national origin, gender, age, marital status, receipt of public assistance, or exercise of rights under the Consumer Credit Protection Act. Scores used by individual lenders may use such elements as income, occupation and type of residence in determining their own custom credit score.
Credit scores consider a wide range of information on your credit report. Specifically, they do not consider:
- Your race, color, religion, national origin, sex and marital status. U.S. law prohibits credit scoring from considering these facts, as well as any receipt of public assistance, or the exercise of any consumer right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act.
- Your age.
- Your salary, occupation, title, employer, date employed or employment history. However, lenders may consider this information in making their approval decisions.
- Where you live.
- Any interest rate being charged on a particular credit card or other account.
- Any items reported as child/family support obligations or rental agreements.
- Certain types of inquiries (requests for your credit report). The score does not count "consumer disclosure" inquiries requests you have made for your credit report in order to check it. It also does not count "promotional inquiries" requests made by lenders in order to make you a "pre-approved" credit offer or "account review inquiries" requests made by lenders to review your account with them. Finally, inquiries for employment purposes are not counted



