The best time to repair your credit is now
By the time you become interested in credit, two things have
probably already happened:
1) Your credit is bad, and has been for sometime
2) You want something in life like a new car or house and your
poor credit is preventing you from achieving it
At this point, you'll embark on your credit repair journey, and
if you persist, you'll end up on a road to ever increasing
prosperity. The argument for having good credit is fairly
obvious, but I'll briefly reiterate some points: with good
credit you can purchase large items at reasonable prices that
you could probably not afford otherwise. Very few people are
fortunate enough to have the enormous amount of cash it takes to
purchase a home. That's why they borrow money from banks. When
they have good credit, they get this money on favorable terms,
and they can live a relatively opulent lifestyle. With poor
credit or no credit, the options you have in life for where you
live and what you own are extremely limited. When you decide to
repair your credit, you've already made the decision to turn
your life around that will end up leading you through current
financial crisis and get you to the point where your money is
managed well, and you lead the lifestyle you want.
How hard is it to repair my own credit?
People often think that repairing their credit is tough, or
that they need to hire and expensive, specialized professional
to do the job for them. This is far from the truth, and in fact,
there are laws against companies charging people up-front for
any work to repair their credit. Many people choose to skip this
effort, and to instead embark on repairing their own credit and
this helps them in two ways:
1) It makes them really think about what led them to this
trouble in the first place. This type of soul-searching is
necessary if the person is ever planning on changing the habits
that led them to this credit crunch in the same place 2) It will
teach them the value of credit in a way that won't happen if
someone else does the work for them.
And the truth of the matter concerning credit repair is: this
is not rocket science by any stretch of the imagination. If you
can type legible letters and put them in an evelope, stamp them,
and take them to your local post office, you are well qualified
to repair your own credit. Considering that many credit repair
agencies are actually scams, or the ones that do work well may
charge very high fees, it's in your own best interest to do the
small level of learning required to fix your own credit. The
only qualifications you need to repair your credit are: the
willingness to learn, the effort to face up to your financial
past and change your ways, and the desire to accomplish this
task in a persistent manner. The internet is currently the best
source of information you can use to repair credits. There are
even helpful communities of people who have gone through the
process before, repairing their own credit, who can offer you
support and insights on your credit repair efforts. The first
step towards credit repair is the biggest, but once you've
embarked on the journey, the end result is a much better
financial existence than your current one.