Paying bills won't do shit for your credit score unless you don't pay them - they won't keep a credit score active. You had loans and that's what kept yours alive. If you have no action on your account for 10 years, it's all wiped.
https://www.equifax.com/personal/ed...-long-does-information-stay-on-credit-report/
It's true that you can maintain a credit score without a credit card, but you have to have some type of revolving account. Most credit models require recent credit history to generate a score. Your FICO score will disappear if a creditor hasn't reported activity in your name to the credit bureaus in the past 6 months. Obviously this is an issue if you haven't had debt in years.
Correct, but if no loans or revolving credit, in 10 years you have no credit history at all. I'm done, this is boring.
If you don't have a credit card and don't have a car payment and don't have a mortgage you don't, for the most part, have credit history.
Which means you are a credit risk.
Plain and simple - a blank slate.
Suntrader,
You can buy a car or lease one without a credit card. Same with a home...you don't need a credit card. Someone jumped into the conversation to imply if you're debt free...you have no credit history...
When my kid goes off to college next year in the U.S...I'm going to buy him a car without a credit card. The same way I bought my car and the two cars before that.
- Not true.
wrbtrader
Being debt free does not automatically mean you have good credit. If you buy a car or house or pay tuition in full with cash, you by definition do not have a credit history, which simply shows the ability to pay off debts in a timely fashion. No debt, no credit history.
If in seven to ten years you do not establish another line of revolving credit after the last activity on those accounts, the only credit history you will have on file is your age, past residences, and no payment history. That is kinda' bad for credit scores?