What Is a Good Credit Score? (The Full Breakdown) 2026

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Your credit score affects the interest rates you pay, the apartments you can rent, and sometimes even the jobs you can get. But what counts as a “good” score — and what exactly makes it move up or down? Here is the complete breakdown.

Rates and figures as of May 2026.

Credit Score Ranges (FICO Scale)

Most lenders use the FICO score, which ranges from 300 to 850. Here is how the ranges are generally classified:

Score Range Category What It Means
800–850 Exceptional Best rates; automatic approvals on most products
740–799 Very Good Near-best rates; strong approval odds
670–739 Good Competitive rates on most products
580–669 Fair Higher rates; some products not available
300–579 Poor Very limited options; secured cards or credit-builder loans only

The average American credit score is around 715 as of 2026 — solidly in the “good” range.

What Makes Up Your FICO Score

Five factors determine your score. Each carries a different weight:

Factor Weight What Counts
Payment History 35% On-time vs. late payments, collections, bankruptcies
Amounts Owed (Utilization) 30% How much of your available credit you are using
Length of Credit History 15% Age of oldest account, newest account, average age
Credit Mix 10% Mix of revolving (cards) and installment (loans) accounts
New Credit 10% Recent applications and hard inquiries

What You Need by Loan or Product Type

Different lenders have different minimums depending on the product:

Product Minimum Score Best Rates Start At
Conventional mortgage 620 740+
FHA loan 500 (10% down) / 580 (3.5% down) N/A
Auto loan (best rates) 661 720+
Personal loan (prime rate) 670 720+
Premium travel credit card 700 740+
Balance transfer card (0% APR) 670 690+
Apartment rental 620–650 (varies by landlord) N/A

How to Check Your Credit Score for Free

  • AnnualCreditReport.com: The official federally mandated source for your full credit report from all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Free weekly access.
  • Credit card issuers: Most major cards (Chase, Discover, Capital One, Citi) show your FICO or VantageScore for free in your account portal.
  • Credit Karma / Credit Sesame: Free VantageScore — not the same as FICO but directionally accurate.

Note: You have multiple credit scores (different FICO versions, VantageScore, scores from each bureau). The one a lender pulls may differ from what you see on a monitoring app, but they should be in the same ballpark.

The Fastest Ways to Improve Your Credit Score

  1. Pay every bill on time. Even one 30-day late payment can drop your score 50 to 100 points. Set up autopay for at least the minimum due.
  2. Lower your utilization. Aim to use less than 30% of your available credit across all cards — ideally under 10% for the highest scores. Paying down balances or requesting a credit limit increase both help.
  3. Do not close old accounts. Closing a card reduces your available credit and shortens your average account age — both hurt your score.
  4. Dispute errors. About 1 in 5 Americans has an error on their credit report. Errors can depress your score significantly. Dispute them at the bureau’s website (Equifax.com, Experian.com, TransUnion.com).
  5. Limit hard inquiries. Each new credit application triggers a hard pull. Multiple applications in a short period signal risk to lenders.

Key Takeaways

  • 670 to 739 is “good”; 740 and above unlocks the best rates on most products
  • Payment history (35%) and credit utilization (30%) are the two biggest factors — fix those first
  • Check your full credit report annually for errors; dispute anything that is inaccurate
  • Checking your own score does not hurt it — only hard inquiries from lenders do
  • You do not need a perfect 850; even 740 typically gets you the best available rates

Related: How To Dispute Errors On Your Credit Report