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Divorce and Your
Credit Standing
A loan applicant comes in with a good application. Good income.
Great employment history, a strong ability to save. But there's
some negative blemishes on the credit report. Late pays, maybe a
charge off or two. And a little code on the credit
report indicates it's a spouse with the credit problems,
not the applicant and the applicant is no longer married. What does
that mean?
Usually it's a situation where a couple was divorced, and even
though the divorce decree clearly stated who was responsible for
which credit card or which mortgage, debits and defaults are still
showing up on the credit
report. Still showing you, the innocent applicant, as
a responsible party.
If this has happened to you, if you have a situation where you
jointly obligated yourself with someone else to repay on a car loan,
a boat or credit card, you need to do some things to improve your
credit file.
Understand that a divorce decree will do little by itself to remove
any joint debt from your credit history. That's your responsibility.
The first thing you need to do is obtain your credit
report to see if in fact your "ex" is or is
not hurting your credit rating. Even though you may be making your
monthly payments on time, every time, if any joint debt is showing
as a derogatory account, this could seriously affect your credit
- especially if you wait a long time to change the data.
If you find that indeed your credit has been harmed by the actions
of someone in your past, be prepared to document your agreements
for your lender. For instance, you'll want to provide your complete
divorce decree, showing who has agreed to be responsible for what.
If you have agreements from those credit companies releasing you
as a responsible party, be prepared to show those as well.
Sometimes joint accounts create other problems. Let's say your
past partner wanted the old house and agreed to take title as well
as the mortgage payment. Unless that loan has been refinanced into
the single owner's name only, you're probably still showing up as
being responsible for paying the mortgage - regardless of what your
divorce decree declares.
If you see that the original mortgage is showing up as "active"
on your credit report and still appears in your name, you may also
find that your debt ratios for qualifying are out of the norm. Why
not? Your credit
report shows a mortgage payment on top of the one you're
applying for. In this case, drag out - again - your divorce decree.
If you can get canceled checks for the past 12 months from your
ex showing timely payments to the mortgage company, this can go
a long way to show that even though the mortgage payment is still
on your credit
report, you're not the one making the payments.
Beware,
though, canceled checks may only help you if the mortgage is on
time. If there are late payments on that mortgage, your ex may have
to refinance the old debt in its entirety before a new lender will
absolve you of the old mortgage.
So don't be surprised if you find that old agreements, even court
ordered ones, aren't being followed. Before you apply for a loan,
take a little extra time to review your credit
report. It'll be time well spent.
Click here
for your free
credit report and find out today if
your personal credit report contains mistakes!
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