Is 520 a Good Credit Score? Here's What It Actually Means
By Credit Booster Team | Published April 10, 2026 | Updated April 11, 2026
A 520 credit score puts you in the bottom tier of borrowers. Here's exactly what that means for loans, housing, and how fast you can change it.
A 520 credit score isn't just "not great." It's 194 points below the national average of 714, and lenders treat it accordingly - with automatic denials, security deposits, and interest rates that can cost you $14,000 extra on a single car loan.
Here's what's actually happening with your credit, what doors are open, and what it takes to get out of this range.
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What a 520 Score Actually Means
FICO scores run from 300 to 850. A 520 lands squarely in the "poor" tier (300β579), which is the bottom classification on the scale. About 16% of Americans are in this range.
That 62% delinquency statistic matters here - FICO research shows that roughly 62% of consumers scoring below 579 will go 90+ days past due on at least one account within a predictable window. Lenders know this number. It's exactly why they either decline your application or charge you enough interest to compensate for the risk they're absorbing.
You're not blacklisted forever. But right now, you're in a category where every financial product costs more and approvals are harder to get.
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What Lenders Actually Do With a 520 Score
Credit Cards
Most major issuers auto-decline at this score. If you do get approved, you're looking at APRs between 25β36%, annual fees, and often a security deposit of $200β$2,500.
Your realistic move here is a secured credit card - one where you deposit cash equal to your credit limit. Yes, it feels like a step backward. It isn't. Used correctly, a secured card is one of the fastest tools to rebuild your score.
Auto Loans
Auto lenders are actually more flexible than most people expect at a 520. You can get approved. The problem is what you'll pay for it.
A borrower with a 720+ score was getting around 5.64% APR on a new car loan (as of late 2022). At a 500β589 score, that jumps to roughly 17.54%. On a $40,000 loan over 60 months, that's more than $14,000 in extra interest. You're buying a used car with the money you waste on rate difference alone.
Expect to put 15β20% down and have your documentation scrutinized more than average.
Mortgages
Conventional mortgages through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac require a minimum 620 score. You're 100 points short. That door is closed right now.
FHA loans technically allow scores down to 500 with a 10% down payment, but in practice, most FHA-approved lenders have overlays that push their minimum to 580 or higher. At 520, you'll face denials or need a co-signer with strong credit.
There are specialized lenders who'll work with lower scores, but their rates run 2β4 percentage points above conventional. On a $300,000 mortgage, that's an enormous amount of money over 30 years.
Personal Loans and Everything Else
Traditional banks? Unlikely. Credit unions are more flexible and worth trying. Online alternative lenders will approve you, but 25β36%+ APR with aggressive terms is the norm. I've seen clients come to us after taking personal loans at 36% APR when they didn't realize how fast that compounds.
The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About
A 520 score follows you into places people don't expect.
Utility companies - gas, electric, water - often require security deposits when your score is in the poor range. Landlords run credit checks and most will either deny you outright or require a co-signer and a larger deposit. Some employers, particularly for financial, security, or government roles, check credit history as part of their screening. A 520 can literally cost you a job.
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Why Your Score Is at 520: The Most Common Culprits
I've reviewed thousands of credit reports over the years. Scores in the 520 range almost always trace back to the same handful of issues.
Missed payments are the biggest driver. Payment history is 35% of your FICO score - the single largest factor. One 90-day late payment can drop a good score by 100+ points. Multiple late payments compound fast.
High credit utilization is the second most common problem. If your credit cards are maxed out or close to it, your utilization ratio is killing your score. Using more than 30% of your available credit hurts you; using more than 70% is devastating.
Collections accounts show up constantly in reports in this range. A $200 medical bill that went to collections three years ago is still dragging your score down today.
Recent hard inquiries pile on damage. One client came to us with 12 hard inquiries in 8 months - she'd been shopping for loans but didn't know each application triggered one. Each hard inquiry drops your score 5β10 points and stays on your report for 12 months.
Thin file or no established credit mix also contributes. If you only have one credit product, lenders have limited data to work with.
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Your Legal Rights That Most People Ignore
This is where I see people leave real money on the table.
Under Section 611 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA, 15 U.S.C. Β§ 1681i), you have the right to dispute any inaccurate or unverifiable information on your credit report. When you file a dispute, the bureau has 30 days to investigate. If they can't verify the item with the original creditor, they're legally required to remove it.
Bureaus love to drag their feet. Shocking, I know. But that 30-day clock is federal law, and it applies to all three - Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
Under Section 1681g, you're entitled to one free credit report per year from each bureau through AnnualCreditReport.com. Pull all three. Errors are more common than people think - one Federal Trade Commission study found that 1 in 5 consumers had a material error on at least one report.
If you were denied credit, Section 1691 of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) requires lenders to give you specific written reasons. Get those reasons in writing. Sometimes they reveal a reporting error that's entirely fixable.
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The Timeline: How Fast Can You Actually Improve a 520?
People ask me this constantly, and I'll give you the honest answer.
Getting from 520 to 620+ in 12β24 months is realistic. Getting to 680+ in 24β36 months is achievable with consistent effort. Breaking 700 takes longer if you have collections or late payments still in the active window.
Here's why: negative items don't disappear immediately. Late payments and collections stay on your report for 7 years from the original delinquency date under FCRA Β§ 1681c. Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays 10 years; Chapter 13 stays 7. You can't remove legitimate negative items before their expiration date.
What you can do is bury the negatives with positive information while simultaneously disputing anything inaccurate.
The moves that actually work:
Pay everything on time, starting now. Every single payment. Set up autopay if that's what it takes. Your most recent payment history carries more weight than old missed payments.
Get your utilization below 30% on every card. If you can't pay down balances, call your card issuer and request a credit limit increase. Don't open new accounts just for this - you need 6+ months of history before that helps.
Add a secured credit card and use it for one small recurring purchase monthly. Pay it in full. Let it age.
Dispute inaccurate items on all three bureau reports. Don't just file one dispute and forget it - follow up. If you want to track what's being investigated and when to escalate, the Credit Booster AI tool at creditbooster.ai automates a lot of this process and flags items that are likely disputable.
Keep your oldest accounts open. Length of credit history is 15% of your score. Closing an old card to "clean up" your credit is one of the most common mistakes I see.
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Three Myths About 520 Scores Worth Killing
"My score is permanent." It recalculates every month. The negative items lose impact over time. Your behavior today is already influencing next month's number.
"Checking my score will hurt it." Checking your own credit is a soft inquiry. Zero impact on your score. Only hard inquiries from lenders cause a temporary dip. Check your report as often as you want.
"Paying off an old collection instantly fixes my score." Sometimes it helps. Sometimes it temporarily dips your score because the account gets updated (showing more recent activity on an old debt). The long-term benefit is real, but don't expect an immediate 50-point jump from paying one old collection.
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Where to Go From Here
If you're sitting at 520, the path forward isn't complicated. It's just not fast.
Start by pulling all three of your credit reports today at AnnualCreditReport.com. Identify every error, every collection, every account dragging you down. Then build a dispute strategy around the inaccurate items and a payment plan around the legitimate ones.
If you want structured guidance and more deep-dives into credit strategy, Join Credit Club at joincreditclub.com - we put out detailed guides on exactly these situations.
Your 520 is where you're starting. It doesn't have to be where you stay.
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