• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Ask Liz Weston

Get smart with your money

  • About
  • Liz’s Books
  • Speaking
  • Disclosure
  • Contact

Q&A: Credit reports vs. credit scores

September 20, 2021 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I recently downloaded both my wife’s and my own credit reports. I noticed that, for a number of reasons, her report has much less information than mine. The probability is that I will die before her, so my question is whether you can suggest any ways to be sure she has a good credit rating after I’m gone. Do the credit reporting agencies give any weight to a spouse’s score?

Answer: They do not, unless the spouse is alive and a co-applicant.

The amount of information in a credit report doesn’t dictate someone’s scores, however. People can have good scores with only a few credit accounts, or bad scores with lots of accounts. Your wife should find out what some of her scores are to decide next steps. Her bank or credit card issuer may supply her with scores, or she could get free scores from one of the many sites that offer those. (FICO is the formula most often used by lenders, but VantageScore can give her a good idea how lenders view her, as well.)

If her scores are less than excellent (generally 740 and up), she could look for ways to improve them such as making all credit payments on time, using only a small fraction of her available credit and perhaps adding an account or two. Credit builder loans from credit unions can be a good way to build or rebuild credit.

Related Posts

  • The best place to get your credit reports, scores

    Dear Liz: I want to see all three of my credit reports with scores and…

  • Insurance scores aren't the same as credit scores

    Dear Liz: I have very high credit scores, but recently got a notice from my…

  • Forgotten credit card trashes scores

    Dear Liz: My husband and I are in the process of refinancing our mortgage. I…

  • Why traditional credit scores still matter

    Researchers and startups say all kinds of weird data can predict your creditworthiness. What kind…

Filed Under: Credit Scoring, Q&A Tagged With: Credit Scores, q&a

Primary Sidebar

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Ask Liz Weston 2.0 On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in