How Does Credit Utilization Affect Your Score?
April 7, 2026 | 6 min read
April 7, 2026 | 6 min read
If your credit score isn’t where you want it to be, your credit utilization ratio could be a key reason why. It’s one of the most influential factors in your score — and it’s also one of the most overlooked.
At Credit Saint, we’ve worked with 250,000+ Americans to review their credit reports and pursue the corrections that may position them for stronger financial standing. We handle every step so you don’t have to figure it out alone.
This guide breaks down what credit utilization is, how it affects your score, how to calculate it, and which strategies may help bring it down.
| Key Takeaways |
|---|
|
Not sure what’s on your credit report? Start with a free credit consultation with Credit Saint — we review your full report and handle every step from there.
Credit utilization — also called your credit utilization ratio (CUR) — is the percentage of your total available revolving credit that you are currently using. It applies primarily to credit cards and other revolving credit accounts, not installment loans like mortgages or auto loans.
For example, if you have one credit card with a $10,000 limit and a current balance of $3,000, your utilization on that card is 30%. Lenders and credit bureaus also look at your overall utilization across all cards combined.
A high utilization rate may signal to lenders that you are over-reliant on credit, which can affect both your score and your ability to access new credit on favorable terms. For a closer look at how this ratio is defined, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s credit resources offer a helpful foundation.
Credit utilization is one of the heaviest-weighted factors in most scoring models. Under the FICO scoring framework, it typically accounts for approximately 30% of your total score — second only to payment history.
Here’s how the impact breaks down:
It’s worth noting that errors on your credit report — such as a balance reported incorrectly or a payment misapplied — can make your utilization appear higher than it actually is. According to the FTC (2021), 1 in 5 consumers have identified errors on their credit reports. Credit Saint reviews your report to identify and challenge those kinds of inaccuracies, and we handle every step of that process on your behalf.
Calculating your ratio is straightforward. Follow these three steps:
Example:
Total balances: $1,500. Total limits: $10,000. Utilization ratio: 15%.
Credit bureaus generally receive updated balance and limit information once per billing cycle. That means paying down balances before your statement closes may result in a lower utilization figure being reported.
If your utilization is higher than you’d like, several strategies may help bring it down over time:
One factor that is sometimes missed: reporting inaccuracies. If a balance on your report is listed higher than it actually is — or a payment was applied incorrectly — your utilization will look worse than it should. A credit repair review may help identify those kinds of issues.
Ready to take a closer look at your credit? Contact Credit Saint for a free credit consultation — our team reviews your report and pursues any inaccuracies that may be holding your score back.
Credit utilization is one of the most impactful — and most actionable — factors affecting your credit score. A ratio that’s too high can limit your borrowing options and cost you in higher interest rates over time.
The good news is that utilization can shift relatively quickly once you have a clear picture of what’s on your report. Credit Saint has been working with Americans since 2007 — BBB accredited, with a 4.8-star Google rating from 15,000+ reviews — and our team handles every step of the review and dispute process so you can focus on moving forward.
Ready to see what’s on your credit report? Contact Credit Saint today for a free credit consultation — we review your report and handle every step from here.
Reviewed By:
Ashley Davison
Editor
Ashley is currently the Chief Compliance Officer for Credit Saint, previously the Chief Operating Officer. Ashley got into the Financial world by working as a Logistics Coordinator at Ernst & Young. Coming from a previous career in education, she is eager to teach the world everything she knows and learn everything that she doesn’t! Ashley is a FICO® certified professional, a Board Certified Credit Consultant, a Certified Credit Score Consultant with the Credit Consultants Association of America, UDAAP certified, and holds a Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Compliance Certificate.