How to Improve Your Credit Score Before Buying a Home
By Smart Mortgage Calculator Editorial Team · Published May 12, 2026 · Updated June 8, 2026 · 6 min read
Of all the factors that determine your mortgage rate, your credit score is one of the few you can actively improve in a few months. The difference between a "good" and "excellent" score can be a quarter to half a percentage point on your rate — real money over 30 years.
Why your score matters so much
Lenders price risk. A higher score signals you're likely to repay on time, so they reward you with a lower rate and better terms. On a $350,000 loan, even a 0.5% rate difference can mean tens of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan — see for yourself in the mortgage calculator.
Steps that move the needle
- Pay every bill on time — payment history is the single biggest factor.
- Lower your credit utilization to under 30% (ideally under 10%) of your limits.
- Avoid opening or closing accounts in the months before you apply.
- Dispute errors on your credit reports — they're more common than you'd think.
- Keep older accounts open to preserve your average account age.
Timing your application
Give yourself three to six months of clean, intentional credit behavior before applying. When you do shop for a mortgage, do it within a focused window (often 14–45 days) so multiple lender inquiries count as a single event for scoring purposes.
Keep reading
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First-Time Homebuyer Guide for Georgia (2026)
From budgeting and pre-approval to closing day — a practical, Georgia-specific roadmap for first-time buyers in 2026.
This article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Rates and figures are indicative and may change. Consult a licensed mortgage professional about your situation. See our disclaimer.