Impact on credit score of opening and closing accounts Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Frequently Answered Questions (by topic) Can we remove “Strategies for earning more money” from the on-topic list?Experian credit report: what are major credit cards?Is it a bad idea to have 3 secured credit card accounts open?Should I close my BestBuy Credit Card? Will it affect my credit score and history?Am I using my credit card wrong?Why was my Credit Limit Increase Denied?Optimal number of credit cards for a given length of credit historyDoes LendingClub's quick screening impact credit score?Does closing accounts lower one's credit score?Will the AMEX to CitiBank portfolio sale affect my credit score?Does opening credit cards at different banks impact credit score?

Compare a given version number in the form major.minor.build.patch and see if one is less than the other

What causes the direction of lightning flashes?

Can anything be seen from the center of the Boötes void? How dark would it be?

Around usage results

Ports Showing Closed/Filtered in Nmap Scans

Why are both D and D# fitting into my E minor key?

Should I use a zero-interest credit card for a large one-time purchase?

What is this building called? (It was built in 2002)

Do I really need to have a message in a novel to appeal to readers?

Closed form of recurrent arithmetic series summation

Is it fair for a professor to grade us on the possession of past papers?

How can I use the Python library networkx from Mathematica?

Quick way to create a symlink?

How to react to hostile behavior from a senior developer?

Why aren't air breathing engines used as small first stages

Dating a Former Employee

When coming out of haste, do attackers have advantage on you?

What's the meaning of "fortified infraction restraint"?

For a new assistant professor in CS, how to build/manage a publication pipeline

Using et al. for a last / senior author rather than for a first author

Extracting terms with certain heads in a function

Why wasn't DOSKEY integrated with COMMAND.COM?

What is the longest distance a player character can jump in one leap?

First console to have temporary backward compatibility



Impact on credit score of opening and closing accounts



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Frequently Answered Questions (by topic)
Can we remove “Strategies for earning more money” from the on-topic list?Experian credit report: what are major credit cards?Is it a bad idea to have 3 secured credit card accounts open?Should I close my BestBuy Credit Card? Will it affect my credit score and history?Am I using my credit card wrong?Why was my Credit Limit Increase Denied?Optimal number of credit cards for a given length of credit historyDoes LendingClub's quick screening impact credit score?Does closing accounts lower one's credit score?Will the AMEX to CitiBank portfolio sale affect my credit score?Does opening credit cards at different banks impact credit score?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















I'm planning on buying a house sometime in the Winter of 2020 to spring 2021.



Currently, my credit score is about 770 and I have the following open credit lines:



  • A 2.5 year old $25,000 Prosper loan with a $12,000 balance with 2.5 years to go.

  • A gold American Express that has been open since 1998

  • A First National Bank American Express with $0 balance, $12,000 limit open since 2013

  • A Visa card with $0 balance, $4100 limit open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $11,000 balance, $25,000 limit, open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $0 balance, $11,000 limit, open since 2014

So, about $77,100 available of which $23,000 is used or about 30% utilizaton



I am paying down the open lines and should be finished with that by the end of the year.



I never use the $4100 Visa or the First National Bank AmEx. And, I received an offer for a $10,000 limit Visa at %9.15 from my credit union.



That is a substantially better rate than any of my other cards and I was considering closing both of the unused accounts. This would result in:



$71,000 available, $23,000 used and 32.39% utilization.



So, doing this will increase my utilization, lower the average age of my credit, and result in a hard query on my account.



I have 2 questions:



  1. Is there a way to determine how much doing this will lower my score?

  2. If I do it, will my score recover by the winter of 2020 when I start looking for home loans.

Any insight that you can provide would be appreciated.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

    – Nosjack
    4 hours ago











  • Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    3 hours ago

















1















I'm planning on buying a house sometime in the Winter of 2020 to spring 2021.



Currently, my credit score is about 770 and I have the following open credit lines:



  • A 2.5 year old $25,000 Prosper loan with a $12,000 balance with 2.5 years to go.

  • A gold American Express that has been open since 1998

  • A First National Bank American Express with $0 balance, $12,000 limit open since 2013

  • A Visa card with $0 balance, $4100 limit open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $11,000 balance, $25,000 limit, open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $0 balance, $11,000 limit, open since 2014

So, about $77,100 available of which $23,000 is used or about 30% utilizaton



I am paying down the open lines and should be finished with that by the end of the year.



I never use the $4100 Visa or the First National Bank AmEx. And, I received an offer for a $10,000 limit Visa at %9.15 from my credit union.



That is a substantially better rate than any of my other cards and I was considering closing both of the unused accounts. This would result in:



$71,000 available, $23,000 used and 32.39% utilization.



So, doing this will increase my utilization, lower the average age of my credit, and result in a hard query on my account.



I have 2 questions:



  1. Is there a way to determine how much doing this will lower my score?

  2. If I do it, will my score recover by the winter of 2020 when I start looking for home loans.

Any insight that you can provide would be appreciated.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

    – Nosjack
    4 hours ago











  • Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    3 hours ago













1












1








1








I'm planning on buying a house sometime in the Winter of 2020 to spring 2021.



Currently, my credit score is about 770 and I have the following open credit lines:



  • A 2.5 year old $25,000 Prosper loan with a $12,000 balance with 2.5 years to go.

  • A gold American Express that has been open since 1998

  • A First National Bank American Express with $0 balance, $12,000 limit open since 2013

  • A Visa card with $0 balance, $4100 limit open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $11,000 balance, $25,000 limit, open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $0 balance, $11,000 limit, open since 2014

So, about $77,100 available of which $23,000 is used or about 30% utilizaton



I am paying down the open lines and should be finished with that by the end of the year.



I never use the $4100 Visa or the First National Bank AmEx. And, I received an offer for a $10,000 limit Visa at %9.15 from my credit union.



That is a substantially better rate than any of my other cards and I was considering closing both of the unused accounts. This would result in:



$71,000 available, $23,000 used and 32.39% utilization.



So, doing this will increase my utilization, lower the average age of my credit, and result in a hard query on my account.



I have 2 questions:



  1. Is there a way to determine how much doing this will lower my score?

  2. If I do it, will my score recover by the winter of 2020 when I start looking for home loans.

Any insight that you can provide would be appreciated.










share|improve this question
















I'm planning on buying a house sometime in the Winter of 2020 to spring 2021.



Currently, my credit score is about 770 and I have the following open credit lines:



  • A 2.5 year old $25,000 Prosper loan with a $12,000 balance with 2.5 years to go.

  • A gold American Express that has been open since 1998

  • A First National Bank American Express with $0 balance, $12,000 limit open since 2013

  • A Visa card with $0 balance, $4100 limit open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $11,000 balance, $25,000 limit, open since 2013

  • A Citibank Mastercard, $0 balance, $11,000 limit, open since 2014

So, about $77,100 available of which $23,000 is used or about 30% utilizaton



I am paying down the open lines and should be finished with that by the end of the year.



I never use the $4100 Visa or the First National Bank AmEx. And, I received an offer for a $10,000 limit Visa at %9.15 from my credit union.



That is a substantially better rate than any of my other cards and I was considering closing both of the unused accounts. This would result in:



$71,000 available, $23,000 used and 32.39% utilization.



So, doing this will increase my utilization, lower the average age of my credit, and result in a hard query on my account.



I have 2 questions:



  1. Is there a way to determine how much doing this will lower my score?

  2. If I do it, will my score recover by the winter of 2020 when I start looking for home loans.

Any insight that you can provide would be appreciated.







credit-score credit credit-report credit-history






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









yoozer8

2,28841123




2,28841123










asked 4 hours ago









Rex ChandlerRex Chandler

802




802







  • 2





    Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

    – Nosjack
    4 hours ago











  • Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    3 hours ago












  • 2





    Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

    – Nosjack
    4 hours ago











  • Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    3 hours ago







2




2





Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

– Nosjack
4 hours ago





Is the only reason you want to get the new card because it has a better rate? If you're paying off cards on time (as you should) and not carrying a balance, then the rate is inconsequential.

– Nosjack
4 hours ago













Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

– JoeTaxpayer
3 hours ago





Care to share how you know your current score? Is it an actual FICO or an estimated one from a third party?

– JoeTaxpayer
3 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














Despite what the lender funded media suggests you should close un-utilized accounts and get that Prosper loan and credit card paid off ASAP. If it were me, at most, I would keep the AMEX and one other card. By the time you are ready to buy a home your score will be the highest possible.



This exactly happened to me and many others I have spoken with. Pay off your debt, close accounts and your score skyrockets.



However, this really doesn't matter. Anything above 730 is vanity. Your go/no go decision will all be income and down payment based.



In summary the best thing you can do, in order, is:



  1. Pay off that credit card and Prosper loan.

  2. Save a down payment of 20%

  3. Close credit card accounts

  4. Save even more





share|improve this answer

























  • 740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

    – Hart CO
    2 hours ago


















1














Call me vain, but when it took me a ten minute phone call to get a $250K HELOC approved with no tax returns and no income (literally, we are retired), I'll wear my 850 FICO score on my hat.



You are in great shape. Be mindful of the factors that make up your score.



enter image description here



Adding the new card will -



  • Lower your utilization

  • Lower your credit history (# of years average account age)

  • Add an inquiry/ New Credit

Killing an old card will



  • Raise utilization

  • Lower average account age

You really have 2 issues. The first is whether to get the new card. Yes. Of course. Lowering your current interest burden is quantifiable, you can calculate the savings, and have a relatively low interest source of cash.



The second is what to get rid of. All due respect to @PeteB I'd wait before getting rid of any current cards for the reason above. I happen to use Credit Karma to track my score, and am able to see impact from adding a card or removing one. I carry no debt, and after getting a grip on the fact that running my expenses through credit cards will show a 'balance' so I pay in full before the balance is reported, I'm still careful with which accounts I'll add or remove. As long as the unused card carry no fee, I'd wait until after the mortgage is closed. Long term, the goal should be to have only cards that provide a unique benefit. I have one with 2% cash on all purchases. Another with 5% back on Amazon. Etc.



After you have your mortgage, I'd review the benefits of each card you have, and figure out a strategy moving forward. For example, the last card I got gave me $1200 worth of miles for my first $1000 worth of spending. (The kid transferred colleges, so that card may not be useful for long, but it was worth the effort for the return I got).






share|improve this answer























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "93"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107949%2fimpact-on-credit-score-of-opening-and-closing-accounts%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    Despite what the lender funded media suggests you should close un-utilized accounts and get that Prosper loan and credit card paid off ASAP. If it were me, at most, I would keep the AMEX and one other card. By the time you are ready to buy a home your score will be the highest possible.



    This exactly happened to me and many others I have spoken with. Pay off your debt, close accounts and your score skyrockets.



    However, this really doesn't matter. Anything above 730 is vanity. Your go/no go decision will all be income and down payment based.



    In summary the best thing you can do, in order, is:



    1. Pay off that credit card and Prosper loan.

    2. Save a down payment of 20%

    3. Close credit card accounts

    4. Save even more





    share|improve this answer

























    • 740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

      – Hart CO
      2 hours ago















    3














    Despite what the lender funded media suggests you should close un-utilized accounts and get that Prosper loan and credit card paid off ASAP. If it were me, at most, I would keep the AMEX and one other card. By the time you are ready to buy a home your score will be the highest possible.



    This exactly happened to me and many others I have spoken with. Pay off your debt, close accounts and your score skyrockets.



    However, this really doesn't matter. Anything above 730 is vanity. Your go/no go decision will all be income and down payment based.



    In summary the best thing you can do, in order, is:



    1. Pay off that credit card and Prosper loan.

    2. Save a down payment of 20%

    3. Close credit card accounts

    4. Save even more





    share|improve this answer

























    • 740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

      – Hart CO
      2 hours ago













    3












    3








    3







    Despite what the lender funded media suggests you should close un-utilized accounts and get that Prosper loan and credit card paid off ASAP. If it were me, at most, I would keep the AMEX and one other card. By the time you are ready to buy a home your score will be the highest possible.



    This exactly happened to me and many others I have spoken with. Pay off your debt, close accounts and your score skyrockets.



    However, this really doesn't matter. Anything above 730 is vanity. Your go/no go decision will all be income and down payment based.



    In summary the best thing you can do, in order, is:



    1. Pay off that credit card and Prosper loan.

    2. Save a down payment of 20%

    3. Close credit card accounts

    4. Save even more





    share|improve this answer















    Despite what the lender funded media suggests you should close un-utilized accounts and get that Prosper loan and credit card paid off ASAP. If it were me, at most, I would keep the AMEX and one other card. By the time you are ready to buy a home your score will be the highest possible.



    This exactly happened to me and many others I have spoken with. Pay off your debt, close accounts and your score skyrockets.



    However, this really doesn't matter. Anything above 730 is vanity. Your go/no go decision will all be income and down payment based.



    In summary the best thing you can do, in order, is:



    1. Pay off that credit card and Prosper loan.

    2. Save a down payment of 20%

    3. Close credit card accounts

    4. Save even more






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 3 hours ago









    JoeTaxpayer

    148k23238478




    148k23238478










    answered 4 hours ago









    Pete B.Pete B.

    52.6k13111164




    52.6k13111164












    • 740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

      – Hart CO
      2 hours ago

















    • 740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

      – Hart CO
      2 hours ago
















    740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

    – Hart CO
    2 hours ago





    740 and 760 are frequently used as cutoffs for 'excellent' credit, so maybe some real benefit to getting over 730, but the point is valid that above some number it doesn't do much if any good to have a higher score.

    – Hart CO
    2 hours ago













    1














    Call me vain, but when it took me a ten minute phone call to get a $250K HELOC approved with no tax returns and no income (literally, we are retired), I'll wear my 850 FICO score on my hat.



    You are in great shape. Be mindful of the factors that make up your score.



    enter image description here



    Adding the new card will -



    • Lower your utilization

    • Lower your credit history (# of years average account age)

    • Add an inquiry/ New Credit

    Killing an old card will



    • Raise utilization

    • Lower average account age

    You really have 2 issues. The first is whether to get the new card. Yes. Of course. Lowering your current interest burden is quantifiable, you can calculate the savings, and have a relatively low interest source of cash.



    The second is what to get rid of. All due respect to @PeteB I'd wait before getting rid of any current cards for the reason above. I happen to use Credit Karma to track my score, and am able to see impact from adding a card or removing one. I carry no debt, and after getting a grip on the fact that running my expenses through credit cards will show a 'balance' so I pay in full before the balance is reported, I'm still careful with which accounts I'll add or remove. As long as the unused card carry no fee, I'd wait until after the mortgage is closed. Long term, the goal should be to have only cards that provide a unique benefit. I have one with 2% cash on all purchases. Another with 5% back on Amazon. Etc.



    After you have your mortgage, I'd review the benefits of each card you have, and figure out a strategy moving forward. For example, the last card I got gave me $1200 worth of miles for my first $1000 worth of spending. (The kid transferred colleges, so that card may not be useful for long, but it was worth the effort for the return I got).






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      Call me vain, but when it took me a ten minute phone call to get a $250K HELOC approved with no tax returns and no income (literally, we are retired), I'll wear my 850 FICO score on my hat.



      You are in great shape. Be mindful of the factors that make up your score.



      enter image description here



      Adding the new card will -



      • Lower your utilization

      • Lower your credit history (# of years average account age)

      • Add an inquiry/ New Credit

      Killing an old card will



      • Raise utilization

      • Lower average account age

      You really have 2 issues. The first is whether to get the new card. Yes. Of course. Lowering your current interest burden is quantifiable, you can calculate the savings, and have a relatively low interest source of cash.



      The second is what to get rid of. All due respect to @PeteB I'd wait before getting rid of any current cards for the reason above. I happen to use Credit Karma to track my score, and am able to see impact from adding a card or removing one. I carry no debt, and after getting a grip on the fact that running my expenses through credit cards will show a 'balance' so I pay in full before the balance is reported, I'm still careful with which accounts I'll add or remove. As long as the unused card carry no fee, I'd wait until after the mortgage is closed. Long term, the goal should be to have only cards that provide a unique benefit. I have one with 2% cash on all purchases. Another with 5% back on Amazon. Etc.



      After you have your mortgage, I'd review the benefits of each card you have, and figure out a strategy moving forward. For example, the last card I got gave me $1200 worth of miles for my first $1000 worth of spending. (The kid transferred colleges, so that card may not be useful for long, but it was worth the effort for the return I got).






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        Call me vain, but when it took me a ten minute phone call to get a $250K HELOC approved with no tax returns and no income (literally, we are retired), I'll wear my 850 FICO score on my hat.



        You are in great shape. Be mindful of the factors that make up your score.



        enter image description here



        Adding the new card will -



        • Lower your utilization

        • Lower your credit history (# of years average account age)

        • Add an inquiry/ New Credit

        Killing an old card will



        • Raise utilization

        • Lower average account age

        You really have 2 issues. The first is whether to get the new card. Yes. Of course. Lowering your current interest burden is quantifiable, you can calculate the savings, and have a relatively low interest source of cash.



        The second is what to get rid of. All due respect to @PeteB I'd wait before getting rid of any current cards for the reason above. I happen to use Credit Karma to track my score, and am able to see impact from adding a card or removing one. I carry no debt, and after getting a grip on the fact that running my expenses through credit cards will show a 'balance' so I pay in full before the balance is reported, I'm still careful with which accounts I'll add or remove. As long as the unused card carry no fee, I'd wait until after the mortgage is closed. Long term, the goal should be to have only cards that provide a unique benefit. I have one with 2% cash on all purchases. Another with 5% back on Amazon. Etc.



        After you have your mortgage, I'd review the benefits of each card you have, and figure out a strategy moving forward. For example, the last card I got gave me $1200 worth of miles for my first $1000 worth of spending. (The kid transferred colleges, so that card may not be useful for long, but it was worth the effort for the return I got).






        share|improve this answer













        Call me vain, but when it took me a ten minute phone call to get a $250K HELOC approved with no tax returns and no income (literally, we are retired), I'll wear my 850 FICO score on my hat.



        You are in great shape. Be mindful of the factors that make up your score.



        enter image description here



        Adding the new card will -



        • Lower your utilization

        • Lower your credit history (# of years average account age)

        • Add an inquiry/ New Credit

        Killing an old card will



        • Raise utilization

        • Lower average account age

        You really have 2 issues. The first is whether to get the new card. Yes. Of course. Lowering your current interest burden is quantifiable, you can calculate the savings, and have a relatively low interest source of cash.



        The second is what to get rid of. All due respect to @PeteB I'd wait before getting rid of any current cards for the reason above. I happen to use Credit Karma to track my score, and am able to see impact from adding a card or removing one. I carry no debt, and after getting a grip on the fact that running my expenses through credit cards will show a 'balance' so I pay in full before the balance is reported, I'm still careful with which accounts I'll add or remove. As long as the unused card carry no fee, I'd wait until after the mortgage is closed. Long term, the goal should be to have only cards that provide a unique benefit. I have one with 2% cash on all purchases. Another with 5% back on Amazon. Etc.



        After you have your mortgage, I'd review the benefits of each card you have, and figure out a strategy moving forward. For example, the last card I got gave me $1200 worth of miles for my first $1000 worth of spending. (The kid transferred colleges, so that card may not be useful for long, but it was worth the effort for the return I got).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        JoeTaxpayerJoeTaxpayer

        148k23238478




        148k23238478



























            draft saved

            draft discarded
















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Personal Finance & Money Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107949%2fimpact-on-credit-score-of-opening-and-closing-accounts%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Are there any comparative studies done between Ashtavakra Gita and Buddhim?How is it wrong to believe that a self exists, or that it doesn't?Can you criticise or improve Ven. Bodhi's description of MahayanaWas the doctrine of 'Anatta', accepted as doctrine by modern Buddhism, actually taught by the Buddha?Relationship between Buddhism, Hinduism and Yoga?Comparison of Nirvana, Tao and Brahman/AtmaIs there a distinction between “ego identity” and “craving/hating”?Are there many differences between Taoism and Buddhism?Loss of “faith” in buddhismSimilarity between creation in Abrahamic religions and beginning of life in Earth mentioned Agganna Sutta?Are there studies about the difference between meditating in the morning versus in the evening?Can one follow Hinduism and Buddhism at the same time?Are there any prohibitions on participating in other religion's practices?Psychology of 'flow'

            fallocate: fallocate failed: Text file busy in Ubuntu 17.04? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)defragmenting and increasing performance of old lubuntu system with swap partitionIssue with increasing the root partition from the swapthis /usr/bin/dpkg returned error || ubuntu-16.04, 64bitDefault 17.04 swap file locationHow to Resize Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Swap file size?Ubuntu freezes from online formsMy Laptop is not starting after upgrade ubuntu 16.04 (Kernel 4.8.0-38 to 04.10.0-36)hcp: ERROR: FALLOCATE FAILED!Not sure my swap is being usedWine 3.0 asking for more virtual free swap

            Where else does the Shulchan Aruch quote an authority by name?Parashat Metzora+HagadolPesach/PassoverShulchan Aruch UTF-8Anonymous glosses in the Shulchan AruchWhy is the Shulchan Aruch definitive?Siman 32, Kitzur Shulchan Aruch: UntranslatedLitvaks/Yeshivish and Shulchan AruchBuying a Shulchan AruchEnglish version of SHULCHAN ARUCHIs there any place where Shulchan Aruch rules with the Rosh against the Rif and Rambam?Are there practices where Sepharadim do not hold by Shulchan Aruch?5th part of the shulchan aruch