Will asking for a credit increase hurt your credit score

Dear MNB,

Any time you make a change to your credit history you may see a temporary dip in credit scores. However, increasing your credit limits on your credit cards will not likely hurt, and can help, your credit scores in the long run.

How Balances and Credit Limits Affect Credit Scores

As long as you don't also increase your credit card balances, an increase in your credit limits should reduce your utilization rate, or balance-to-limit ratio. The lower your utilization rate, the better for your credit scores.

Your credit utilization rate, sometimes called your utilization ratio, is calculated by taking the total of all your credit card balances and dividing it by the total of all your credit card limits. Credit utilization is the second most important factor in credit scores, right after payment history.

Why Changes to Your Credit History Can Cause a Dip in Scores

Any time you make a change to your credit history, such as opening a new account or increasing your credit limit, it's possible to see a temporary dip in credit scores until your credit report stabilizes.

Asking your lender to increase your credit limit could result in a hard inquiry on your credit report. Although inquiries have a minimal impact on credit scores, applying for an increase on multiple accounts within a short period of time may result in multiple inquiries being added to your credit history, which could cause a temporary decline in your scores.

However, the longer ago an inquiry occurred, the less impact it will have. Generally, after a few payment periods credit scores rebound because there is no new account representing additional debt.

Keeping your credit card balances low and making all your payments on time are the keys to having good credit scores, with or without that credit line increase.

Thanks for asking,
Jennifer White, Consumer Education Specialist

This question came from a recent Periscope session we hosted.

This question is about Credit Scores

WalletHub, Financial Company

@WalletHub 07/07/20 This answer was first published on 03/10/16 and it was last updated on 07/07/20.For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.

Requesting a credit limit increase will likely trigger a hard inquiry and cause a short-term decrease in your credit score. Receiving an automatic credit limit increase (i.e. your issuer increases your credit limit without you asking) will not hurt your score. No matter how you receive a credit limit increase, it will provide long-term credit-score benefits to responsible users.

A credit limit increase will give you access to more available credit to use. As a result, you will get a better credit utilization ratio, assuming your spending does not increase, too. The lower the ratio, the better your credit score. If you continue to spend and maintain a high balance on your account, you will see a negative impact on your credit score. A credit limit won’t help your credit score if you just max it out immediately.

Will asking for a credit increase hurt your credit score

Dmitriy Fomichenko, President, Sense Financial

@dfomichenko 03/10/16 This answer was first published on 03/10/16. For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.

A credit limit increase can help improve your credit score. Assuming that you keep your spending at the same level, an increase in credit limit will lower your credit utilization and help improve your score.

Keep in mind that if you request a credit limit, your credit card provider will be likely to do a credit check, which can lower your score. However, the impact from such inquiries is usually minor and temporary.

Bart Colom, Financial Advisor

@BartColom 03/31/20 This answer was first published on 02/18/16 and it was last updated on 03/31/20.For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.

Your credit score should improve when your credit limit increases, as it lowers your debt ratio, as slong as you dont increase your outstanding balance. As long as you continue to pay-off your outstanding balances, your debt ratio should continue to decrease, improving your FICO score.

Answer Question

People also ask

Does requesting a credit limit increase hurt your score?

Requesting a credit limit increase can hurt your score, but only in the short term. If you ask for a higher credit limit, most issuers will do a hard “pull,” or “hard inquiry,” of your credit history. A hard inquiry will temporarily lower your credit score. Bank of America, Barclays, Chase, U.S. Bank and USAA will conduct a hard inquiry if you request a credit limit increase. American Express, Capital One and Wells Fargo will not. Citi will notify you when you call if they will generate a hard inquiry or a soft inquiry, which does not affect your score. Discover typically uses soft inquiries, but if you don’t accept the credit limit offered and request a higher limit, it will then be a hard inquiry.read full answer

Hard inquiries will lower your credit score by a few points, but can only affect your score for one year. After two years, hard inquires completely drop off of your credit report. The other thing you need to watch out for is overspending. Requesting a credit limit increase could really wind up hurting your credit score if you use the extra spending power to rack up debt you can’t afford to repay.

Still, the potential negatives that come with requesting a credit limit increase can be managed and are often outweighed by the benefits of having a higher credit limit. The boost in your credit limit could also raise your credit score as long as your spending stays at the same level. The additional credit would lower your utilization, which is the ratio of your balance compared to your credit limit. Ideally, this number should be less than 30 percent for each card. Keeping utilization low tells issuers you’re responsible and aren’t just desperate to max out your card.

Some issuers also extend automatic credit limit increases to eligible cardholders. These increases may occur periodically and do not generate a hard inquiry. To give yourself the best odds of receiving an automatic increase, make all of your monthly payments on time, preferably in full. And give it some time. Issuers tend not to extend automatic increases until you’ve had a card for at least six months. Similarly, if you recently received an increase on an existing account, expect to wait at least six to 12 months before you’re considered for another increase, assuming you manage your account responsibly in the meantime.

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Should I increase my credit limit?

You should increase your credit limit as long as it won’t make you overspend. Getting a credit limit increase does more than just give you increased spending power. It also gives you the potential to lower your credit utilization, which can benefit your credit score. But just because receiving a credit limit increase is a good thing does not mean it’s always the right time to ask for one.read full answer

You shouldn’t ask for a higher credit limit unless your account has been open for at least 6 months and you’ve been paying the monthly bills on time. Otherwise, you’re likely to be rejected, as would also be the case if your credit score has gone down a lot since you got the card. Also, it’s best not to request an increase right before you apply for a credit card, auto loan, mortgage, etc. You’ll want your credit to be in top shape, and requesting a credit limit increase will usually result in a hard pull of your credit report, causing a temporary dip in your credit score.

Assuming the timing works out for your situation, you can look forward to a handful of notable benefits following a credit limit increase.

Why you should increase your credit limit:

  1. It gives you higher spending power.
  2. It can decrease your credit utilization ratio and help your score.
  3. It leaves you better prepared to face a financial emergency.
  4. It reduces the chance that you’ll max out your credit card.

If you curious about how a higher credit limit can lead to lower credit utilization and corresponding credit score gains, an example might be helpful. Let’s say you have a $500 credit limit. If you spend $200 in a month, you have 40% credit utilization. If your credit limit goes up to $800 and you still spend just $200, you’d have 20% credit utilization. Anything under 30% is good for your credit score.

So, getting an increase can help you reduce your utilization percentage without having to cut back on your expenses. Plus, if you already have low utilization, a credit limit increase could allow you to spend more without hurting your score.

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What's the difference between available credit and credit limit?

The difference between a credit card’s available credit and its credit limit is the relationship between the cardholder’s current spending power and his or her total spending power. A credit limit is the maximum amount that can be charged to a credit card overall. Available credit is the credit limit minus any unpaid balance, including pending charges that have yet to post to the account. Your available credit will increase by the amount of each payment you make. A credit card’s credit limit and available credit match when the balance is $0 or the card is “maxed out.”read full answer

Note that while you can spend up to your entire credit limit, bringing your available credit to zero, it’s not a good idea to do so. A maxed-out credit card will raise your credit utilization, which will damage your credit score. The general rule is to have the balance listed on each of your credit card statements amount to less than 30 percent of the card’s credit limit. That would leave you with more than 70 percent available credit on each account. A maxed out credit card, on the other hand, could leave you with no emergency funds. If you have a big chunk of available credit, you can charge whatever’s needed to deal with an unexpected circumstance such as a hospital bill or a car repair.

Here’s what happens when you try to spend more than your available credit:

If you try to make purchases on a card with no available credit, there may be consequences. In most cases, the transaction will simply be denied. Other cards may process it but then hit you with an over-limit fee (if you’ve opted-in for the ability to spend above your limit) and maybe even reduce your limit, too. A high penalty interest rate might also apply, perhaps canceling any low introductory APR previously in effect. Over-limit policies vary by issuer, so be sure to review your card’s terms and conditions or contact customer service for specifics.

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John Prescott, Member

@prescottjohn 03/14/18 This answer was first published on 03/14/18. For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.

Yep. Higher limit means your overal credit utilization ratio goes down, which will bump your score, at least until your balance goes up.

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WalletHub members have a wealth of knowledge to share, and we encourage everyone to do so while respecting our content guidelines. This question was posted by a WalletHub user. Please keep in mind that editorial and user-generated content on this page is not reviewed or otherwise endorsed by any financial institution. In addition, it is not a financial institution’s responsibility to ensure all posts and questions are answered.

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WalletHub Answers is a free service that helps consumers access financial information. Information on WalletHub Answers is provided “as is” and should not be considered financial, legal or investment advice. WalletHub is not a financial advisor, law firm, “lawyer referral service,” or a substitute for a financial advisor, attorney, or law firm. You may want to hire a professional before making any decision. WalletHub does not endorse any particular contributors and cannot guarantee the quality or reliability of any information posted. The helpfulness of a financial advisor's answer is not indicative of future advisor performance.

WalletHub members have a wealth of knowledge to share, and we encourage everyone to do so while respecting our content guidelines. This question was posted by a WalletHub user. Please keep in mind that editorial and user-generated content on this page is not reviewed or otherwise endorsed by any financial institution. In addition, it is not a financial institution’s responsibility to ensure all posts and questions are answered.

Ad Disclosure: Certain offers that appear on this site originate from paying advertisers, and this will be noted on an offer’s details page using the designation "Sponsored", where applicable. Advertising may impact how and where products appear on this site (including, for example, the order in which they appear). At WalletHub we try to present a wide array of offers, but our offers do not represent all financial services companies or products.