credit

3 lessons tagged credit.

Lessons

Credit Scores: What Actually Moves the Number

beginner

A credit score is a single number — 300 to 850 — that lenders use to price your risk. It's built from five factors with fixed weights, and almost everyone gets the priorities backwards. Payment history (35%) and credit utilization (30%) are two-thirds of the score; credit mix and new credit are 10% each. The simulator draws the five factors as one bar where width is how much a factor matters and fill is how well you're doing — so you can see, not just be told, that paying on time and keeping balances low is most of the game.

Buy Now, Pay Later — or Save Up First? The True Cost of Financing a Purchase

beginner

'Buy now, pay later' — store financing, BNPL apps, the credit-card swipe — all sell the same illusion: that a big purchase is really just a small monthly payment. But that monthly payment is a force, and financing points it the wrong way. When you borrow, every payment carries interest you hand to the lender; when you save up the same amount first, that money earns interest for you, and a cash buyer often gets a discount the financed buyer forfeits. This lesson races the two paths for the exact same item on the exact same monthly budget — the payment you'd owe the lender, pointed at a savings account instead. Scored as net worth, the patient saver always finishes ahead, because the interest that worked against the borrower works for the saver, and the discount lands on top. The only thing financing actually buys you is the item sooner — and the simulator puts a precise dollar price on that head start, so you can judge whether getting it now is worth what it costs. There's one honest exception, and the sim shows it too: a genuine 0% promotion with no cash discount costs almost nothing, because the only thing you give up is the small interest your money would have earned. Outside that case, the rule is simple — if the rate to borrow is higher than the rate to save (it almost always is), save up first.

Co-Signing a Loan: Vouching for Someone Else's Debt

beginner

A family member or friend asks you to cosign a car loan or an apartment lease. It feels like a formality — you're not the one borrowing the money, you're just vouching for someone. That framing is wrong in a way that costs real money. A cosigner isn't a witness or a character reference; a cosigner is a co-borrower, equally liable for the entire balance from the moment they sign. Two separate costs follow, and this lesson prices both. The first is guaranteed and invisible: the loan's monthly payment counts against YOUR OWN debt-to-income ratio immediately, whether the primary borrower pays every bill early or never pays at all — a cost that can quietly shrink what you qualify for on your own next loan for years, with nothing having gone wrong. The second is a real risk, not a certainty: if the primary borrower ever misses a payment, it's the same tradeline reporting to both credit files, so the cosigner's score takes the identical hit — and if they stop paying altogether, the cosigner owes the full remaining balance, which, left unpaid, doesn't sit still: interest keeps accruing on it with nobody paying it down. The simulator charts the balance a cosigner is liable for over the loan's life two ways — if the primary borrower keeps paying, and if they stop at a month you choose — so you can watch a debt that was almost paid off reverse and grow past its original size.


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