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    Fundamentos de reparación de crédito

    By Credit Booster Team | Published April 10, 2026 | Updated April 11, 2026

    Planning to buy a house? Learn how to fix your credit before applying for a mortgage, what score you need, and a step-by-step timeline to get mortgage-ready.

    # Fix Your Credit Before Buying a House: Step-by-Step

    *By Credit Booster Team | April 18, 2026 | 13 min read*

    Buying a house is probably the biggest financial decision you will ever make. And your credit score is the gatekeeper. It determines whether you get approved, what interest rate you pay, and how much house you can afford. A 0.5% difference in interest rate on a $350,000 mortgage means roughly $35,000 more or less in interest over 30 years.

    If your credit is not where it needs to be, fixing it before you apply is not just smart — it is potentially worth tens of thousands of dollars. This guide gives you the exact steps and timeline to go from wherever you are now to mortgage-ready.

    What Credit Score Do You Actually Need?

    Loan Type Minimum Score Score for Best Rates
    |-----------|--------------|---------------------|
    FHA 500 (10% down) / 580 (3.5% down) 680+
    Conventional 620 740+
    VA No official minimum (most lenders want 620) 700+
    USDA 640 680+
    Jumbo 700-720 760+

    But minimum score is just the floor. Here is what your rate might look like at different scores for a $350,000 conventional 30-year mortgage (rates approximate for 2026):

    Credit Score Estimated Rate Monthly Payment Total Interest Over 30 Years
    |---|---|---|---|
    760+ 6.0% $2,098 $405,280
    700-759 6.5% $2,212 $446,320
    660-699 7.0% $2,329 $488,440
    620-659 7.75% $2,508 $552,880
    580-619 (FHA) 8.25% $2,629 $596,440

    The difference between a 760 and a 620 score is over $147,000 in extra interest. That is a house. You would be paying for two houses' worth of money for one house.

    Step-by-Step: Fixing Your Credit for a Mortgage

    Step 1: Know Your Starting Point (Week 1)

    Pull your credit reports from all three bureaus at AnnualCreditReport.com. Mortgage lenders use a tri-merge report and typically take the middle score. So if your scores are 580 (Equifax), 610 (Experian), and 595 (TransUnion), your qualifying score is 595.

    Also important: mortgage lenders use older FICO scoring models — typically FICO 2 (Equifax), FICO 4 (TransUnion), and FICO 5 (Experian). The free scores you see on Credit Karma or your bank app may differ from these by 20-40 points. Consider purchasing your mortgage-specific FICO scores from myFICO.com for the most accurate picture.

    Step 2: Create Your Credit Inventory (Week 1)

    Make a detailed spreadsheet of every item on your reports:

    Account Type Status Balance Limit Notes
    |---------|------|--------|---------|-------|-------|
    Example: Chase Visa Credit Card Current $2,400 $5,000 48% utilization
    Example: Med Collections Collection Open $800 N/A Don't recognize this
    Example: Old auto loan Late payment Closed $0 N/A 60-day late, May 2024

    This inventory tells you exactly what you are dealing with and lets you prioritize actions.

    Step 3: Dispute All Errors and Questionable Items (Weeks 1-6)

    Review each item against this checklist:

  1. Is the balance correct?
  2. Is the credit limit correct?
  3. Is the account status correct (open/closed)?
  4. Is the payment history accurate?
  5. Is this even your account?
  6. Should this item have fallen off already (7-year rule)?
  7. For collections: is the amount correct? Is it within the statute of limitations?
  8. File disputes for every item that fails any of these checks. Under the FCRA, bureaus must investigate within 30 days.

    For mortgage preparation specifically, Credit Booster's team does a forensic-level review of your reports. We know what mortgage underwriters look for and which items are most impactful to address first. Our dispute letters are crafted to be thorough and specific, not template-based.

    Step 4: Pay Down Credit Card Balances (Weeks 2-8)

    For mortgage qualification, utilization is critical. Here is the priority order:

  9. Cards over 50% utilization: Pay these down first — they are killing your score
  10. Cards between 30-50%: Next priority
  11. All cards above 10%: Final optimization
  12. The ideal state for mortgage applications: every card below 10% utilization, and total utilization below 10%.

    Timing matters: Pay down balances 2-3 days before each card's statement closing date (not the due date). Call each card issuer to confirm your statement closing date.

    Step 5: Handle Collections Strategically (Weeks 2-12)

    For mortgage applications, collections are handled differently depending on the loan type and amount:

    FHA loans: Collections generally do not need to be paid off unless the total unpaid balance exceeds $2,000. If over $2,000, the underwriter may require payoff or a payment arrangement.

    Conventional loans: Varies by lender. Some require all collections to be paid. Others use a case-by-case approach.

    Strategy for valid collections:

  13. For old collections near the 7-year mark, leaving them alone may be best — paying can reset the date on some scoring models
  14. For recent collections, negotiate a pay-for-delete agreement in writing before paying
  15. For medical collections, newer FICO models and VantageScore ignore paid medical debt, and medical collections under $500 are excluded from reports entirely
  16. Step 6: Request Credit Limit Increases (Week 4)

    If your existing credit card accounts are in good standing, request credit limit increases. This instantly lowers your utilization ratio without paying down any debt. A $5,000 limit increased to $8,000 drops your utilization on a $2,000 balance from 40% to 25%.

    Important: ask for a "soft pull" limit increase. Some issuers do a hard inquiry for limit increases, which you want to avoid when preparing for a mortgage.

    Step 7: Do NOT Close Any Accounts (Ongoing)

    Even if you have credit cards you no longer use, keep them open. Closing them:

  17. Reduces your total available credit (increasing utilization)
  18. Shortens your average account age over time
  19. Reduces your credit mix
  20. If a card has an annual fee you do not want to pay, call and ask to downgrade to a no-fee version of the card — this keeps the account open with its full history.

    Step 8: Avoid All New Credit Applications (Ongoing)

    From the moment you start preparing until your mortgage closes, do not apply for:

  21. New credit cards
  22. Store cards
  23. Auto loans
  24. Personal loans
  25. Any financing ("12 months no interest" offers at furniture stores, etc.)
  26. Each application creates a hard inquiry and potentially a new account, both of which can negatively impact your score. Mortgage underwriters also look at new accounts as potential risk.

    Step 9: Do NOT Make Large Unusual Deposits (Ongoing)

    Mortgage underwriters scrutinize your bank statements. Large, unexplained deposits raise red flags (potential undisclosed loans, gift funds without proper documentation, or structuring). If you receive a large sum (gift from family, bonus, sale of property), make sure you can document and explain the source.

    Step 10: Get Pre-Approved, Not Just Pre-Qualified (Month 4-6)

    Pre-qualification is a rough estimate based on self-reported information. Pre-approval involves a full credit check, income verification, and asset review. It carries much more weight with sellers and gives you a clear picture of what you can afford.

    Get pre-approved with 2-3 lenders within a 14-day window. Multiple mortgage inquiries within this window count as a single inquiry for scoring purposes.

    The Mortgage Credit Repair Timeline

    Here is a realistic timeline depending on your starting point:

    Starting Score 580-619 (Target: 620+ for Conventional)

    Timeline: 2-4 months
  27. Focus on utilization reduction and error disputes
  28. May only need to fix one or two specific issues
  29. Quick wins: pay down highest-utilization cards, dispute any errors
  30. Starting Score 550-579 (Target: 620+ for Conventional or 580+ for FHA)

    Timeline: 3-6 months
  31. Likely dealing with a mix of utilization, recent negative items, and possibly collections
  32. Prioritize error disputes (30-45 day turnaround) while simultaneously paying down balances
  33. Address one or two collections strategically
  34. Starting Score 500-549 (Target: 580+ for FHA)

    Timeline: 6-12 months
  35. Multiple issues likely need addressing
  36. Full dispute campaign across all three bureaus
  37. Collections strategy (validate, negotiate, pay-for-delete)
  38. Credit building with secured card
  39. Consistent on-time payments for 6+ months
  40. Starting Score Below 500 (Target: 580+ for FHA)

    Timeline: 12-18 months
  41. Comprehensive credit repair needed
  42. May include bankruptcy or foreclosure recovery
  43. Full spectrum approach: disputes, collections negotiations, credit building
  44. Consistent effort over time
  45. What Mortgage Lenders Look at Beyond Your Score

    Your credit score opens the door, but underwriters also evaluate:

  46. Payment history for the last 12-24 months: Recent on-time payments matter more than historical ones
  47. Derogatory items: Recent bankruptcies, foreclosures, short sales have waiting periods
  48. Number of accounts: Having at least 3 active trade lines (credit accounts) in good standing is ideal
  49. Debt-to-income ratio: Total monthly debts (including the new mortgage) should not exceed 43-50% of gross monthly income
  50. Reserves: Having 2-6 months of mortgage payments saved shows financial stability
  51. Employment stability: 2+ years of consistent employment or documented income
  52. Working with Credit Booster for Mortgage Preparation

    Preparing your credit for a mortgage is one of the most impactful things Credit Booster helps clients with. The stakes are high — the difference between a good rate and a bad rate is often tens of thousands of dollars.

    Our mortgage preparation process:

  53. Full forensic review of all three credit reports using mortgage-specific FICO models
  54. Prioritized action plan targeting the items with the greatest score impact
  55. Dispute filing and management across all three bureaus
  56. Collections strategy and negotiation guidance
  57. Utilization optimization planning
  58. Regular progress updates and score monitoring
  59. Pre-application review to ensure you are presenting the strongest possible profile
  60. We have helped thousands of clients go from "not mortgage ready" to homeowners. The investment in credit repair pays for itself many times over in interest savings.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How long before buying a house should I start fixing my credit? Start at least 6-12 months before you plan to buy. This gives you enough time to dispute errors (30-45 days per round), pay down balances (1-2 billing cycles to reflect), and build positive payment history (6+ months). If your credit needs significant work, start 12-18 months out.

    Will paying off collections help me get a mortgage? It depends on the loan type and scoring model. For FHA loans using newer FICO models, paid collections have less impact. For conventional loans, some lenders require collections to be paid before closing. Always negotiate a pay-for-delete agreement when possible so the collection is removed entirely rather than showing as "paid collection."

    Can I buy a house with a 580 credit score? Yes, through an FHA loan with a 3.5% down payment. However, your interest rate will be significantly higher than someone with a 700+ score. If you can wait a few months and improve your score, the interest savings over the life of the mortgage will be substantial.

    What is the fastest way to raise my credit score for a mortgage? The fastest methods are: (1) dispute and remove credit report errors (30-45 days), (2) pay down credit card balances to under 10% utilization (1-2 billing cycles), and (3) get added as an authorized user on a family member's seasoned credit card (30 days). These three strategies combined can produce the most rapid improvement.

    Should I use a credit repair company before buying a house? If you have the time and expertise to manage the process yourself, you can. But given that the stakes are so high — potentially tens of thousands of dollars in interest — professional help is often a wise investment. Credit Booster's team knows exactly what mortgage underwriters look for and how to prioritize the actions that will have the greatest impact on your qualifying score and rate.

    AK

    Escrito por

    Alexander Katsman

    Experto en crédito y finanzas

    Alexander Katsman tiene más de 18 años de experiencia en la industria crediticia y financiera. Ha ayudado a miles de clientes a mejorar sus puntajes de crédito.

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