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Getting
Credit When You're Over 62
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November
1998 source http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/over62.htm
Credit
is an important money management tool for both young and
older consumers. Yet the elderly, particularly older
women, may find it difficult to get credit.
If you're an older
consumer who has paid with cash all your life, you may
find it difficult to open a credit account. That's
because you have "no credit history" of how
you paid on credit. If your income has decreased, you
may find it harder to get a loan because you have
"insufficient income." Or, if your spouse
dies, you may find creditors trying to close joint
accounts. A "joint account" is one for which
both spouses applied and signed the credit agreement.
Under the federal Equal
Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), it's against the law for
a creditor to deny you credit or terminate existing
credit simply because of your age. This brochure
explains your rights and offers tips for applying for
and maintaining credit.
Applying
for Credit
Applying for credit
used to mean asking your neighborhood banker for a loan.
Now, with national credit cards and computerized
applications, the day of personal evaluations may be
over. Instead, computer evaluations look at, among other
things, your income, payment history, credit card
accounts, and any outstanding balances. Paying in cash
and in full may be sound financial advice, but they
won't give you a payment history that helps you get
credit.
A major indicator of
your ability to repay a loan is your current income.
Those who consider income must include types of income
that are likely to be received by older consumers. This
includes salaries from part-time employment, Social
Security, pensions, and other retirement benefits.
You also may want to
tell creditors about assets or other sources of income,
such as your home, additional real estate, savings and
checking accounts, money market funds, certificates of
deposit, and stocks and bonds.
If you're age 62 or
over, you have certain other protections. You can't be
denied credit because credit-related insurance is not
available based on your age. Credit insurance pays off
the creditor if you should die or become disabled.
On the other hand, a
creditor can consider your age to:
- favor applicants who
are age 62 or older.
- determine other
elements of creditworthiness. For example, a
creditor could consider whether you're close to
retirement age and a lower income.
While a creditor cannot
take your age directly into account, a creditor may
consider age as it relates to certain elements of
creditworthiness. If, for example, at the age of 70, you
apply for a 30-year mortgage, a lender might be
concerned that you may not live to repay the loan.
However, if you apply for a shorter loan term, increase
your down payment, or do both, you might satisfy the
creditor's concerns.
Checking
Your Credit History
A creditor will
often check your credit history with a credit bureau. If
you want to know what's in your credit file, contact the
credit bureaus listed in the Yellow Pages under
"credit" or "credit rating and
reporting." Because more than one bureau may have a
file on you, call each until you locate all the agencies
maintaining your file. The three major national credit
bureaus are:
- Equifax, P.O. Box
740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241; (800) 685-1111
- Experian (formerly
TRW), P.O. Box 949, Allen, TX 75013; (888)
EXPERIAN (397-3742).
- Trans Union, P.O. Box
1000, Chester, PA 19022; (800) 916-8800.
There's no charge for
your report if a company takes adverse action against
you — based on your credit report — such as denying
your application for credit, insurance, employment, or
rental housing and your request your report within 60
days of receiving the notice of the action. The notice
will give you the name, address, and phone number of the
credit bureau that supplied the information. In
addition, you're entitled to one free report a year if
you can prove that (1) you're unemployed and plan to
look for a job within 60 days, (2) you're on welfare, or
(3) your report is inaccurate because of fraud.
Otherwise, a credit bureau may charge you up to $8 for a
copy of your report.
You may find that your
file doesn't list all of your credit accounts. That's
because not all creditors report to credit bureaus. You
may ask that additional accounts be reported to your
file. Some bureaus may charge for this service.
Credit information about
shared accounts should be reported in your name and your
spouse's. If it's not, ask the creditor in writing to
report the account in both names.
Establishing
a Credit History
If you're denied a
loan or credit card because you have no credit history,
consider establishing one. The best way is to apply for
a small line of credit from your bank or a credit card
from a local department store. Make sure you list your
best financial references. Make payments regularly and
make certain the creditor reports your credit history to
a credit bureau.
If Your
Spouse Dies
Under the ECOA, a
creditor cannot automatically close or change the terms
of a joint account solely because of the death of your
spouse. A creditor may ask you to update your
application or reapply. This can happen if the account
was originally based on all or part of your spouse’s
income and if the creditor has reason to believe your
income alone cannot support the credit line.
After you submit a
re-application, the creditor will determine whether to
continue to extend you credit or change your credit
limits. Your creditor must respond in writing within 30
days of receiving your application. During that time,
you can continue to use your account with no new
restrictions. If you're application is rejected, you
must be given specific reasons, or told of your right to
get this information.
These protections also
apply when you retire, reach age 62 or older, or change
your name or marital status.
Kinds of
Accounts
It's important to
know what kind of credit accounts you have, especially
if your spouse dies. There are two types of accounts —
individual and joint. You can permit authorized persons
to use either type.
- An individual
account is opened in one person's name and is
based only on that person's income and assets.
If you're concerned
about your credit status if your spouse should die, you
may want to try to open one or more individual accounts
in your name. That way, your credit status won't be
affected.
When you're applying for
individual credit, ask the creditor to consider the
credit history of accounts reported in your spouse's or
former spouse's name, as well as those reported in your
name. The creditor must consider this information if you
can prove it reflects positively and accurately on your
ability to manage credit. For example, you may be able
to show through canceled checks that you made payments
on an account, even though it's listed in your spouse's
name only.
- A joint account
is opened in two people's names, often a husband and
wife, and is based on the income and assets of both
or either person. Both people are responsible for
the debt.
Account
"Users"
If you open an
individual account, you may authorize another person to
use it. If you name your spouse as the authorized user,
a creditor who reports the credit history to a credit
bureau must report it in your spouse's name as well as
in yours (if the account was opened after June 1, 1977).
A creditor also may report the credit history in the
name of any other authorized user.
If You're
Denied Credit
The ECOA does not
guarantee you'll get credit. But if you're denied
credit, you have the right to know why. There may be an
error or the computer system may not have evaluated all
relevant information. In that case, you can ask the
creditor to reconsider your application.
If you believe you've
been discriminated against, you may want to write to the
federal agency that regulates that particular creditor.
Your complaint letter should state the facts. Send it,
along with copies (NOT originals) of supporting
documents. You also may want to contact an attorney. You
have the right to sue a creditor who violates the ECOA.
National Banks
Comptroller of the
Currency
Compliance Management, Mail Stop 7-5
Washington, D.C. 20219
State Member Banks of
the Reserve System
Consumer and Community
Affairs
Federal Reserve Board
20th & C Sts., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20551
Federal Credit Unions
National Credit Union
Administration
1776 G St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20456
Non-Member Federally
Insured Banks
Office of Consumer
Programs
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 Seventeenth St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20429
Federally Insured
Savings and Loans, and Federally Chartered State Banks
Consumer Affairs Program
Office of Thrift Supervision
1700 G St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20552
Other Creditors
(includes retail,
gasoline, finance, and mortgage companies)
Consumer Response Center
Federal Trade Commission
Washington, D.C. 20580 |