How to Improve Your Credit Score: 7 Steps That Work
Slug: improve-your-credit-score-guidePillar: Business and Finance > Financial PlanningKeyword: how to improve credit scoreExcerpt: Improve your credit score with seven proven steps: electoral roll, error checks, utilisation under 25%, on-time payments and more. Realistic timelines included.
The fastest ways to improve your credit score are joining the electoral roll, fixing errors on your credit reports, and cutting your credit card utilisation below 25% — all of which can move your score within one to two months. Longer term, nothing beats a spotless record of on-time payments. Here are the seven steps that make a real difference, in the order most people should do them.
Quick note: this is general information, not personal financial advice. For guidance on your own situation, the government-backed MoneyHelper service is free and impartial.
1. Get on the Electoral Roll
If you're in the UK and not registered to vote at your current address, this is the single biggest quick win available. Lenders use the electoral roll to confirm your identity and address, and registration typically feeds through to the credit reference agencies within four to six weeks. It takes five minutes on gov.uk and costs nothing. If you're not eligible to vote, you can still ask the agencies to add a notice confirming your address.
2. Check All Three Credit Reports for Errors
Your credit history is held by three agencies — Experian, Equifax and TransUnion — and different lenders check different ones, so review all three. Errors are more common than you'd think: accounts that aren't yours, a closed account showing open, an old address dragging in someone else's history. You can check each report free (Experian directly, Equifax via ClearScore, TransUnion via Credit Karma). If you spot a mistake, dispute it with the agency — they must investigate, usually within 28 days.
3. Cut Your Credit Utilisation Below 25%
Utilisation is the share of your available credit you're using. If your card limit is £2,000 and your balance sits at £1,500, you're at 75% — and lenders read high utilisation as financial strain. Experian suggests staying under 25%. Two ways to get there: pay balances down (the proper fix), or ask for a limit increase and don't spend it (helps the ratio, but only if you trust yourself). Scores typically respond within a month or two of balances dropping.
4. Never Miss a Payment — Automate It
Payment history is the most influential factor in your score, and a single missed payment can stay visible for six years. The fix is boring and effective: set a direct debit for at least the minimum on every credit card, loan, phone contract and utility account. Pay more manually when you can, but let the direct debit guarantee you're never late. If you've had a missed payment due to genuine crisis — illness, redundancy — you can ask the agencies to add a "notice of correction" explaining it.
5. Keep Old Accounts Open
Closing your oldest credit card feels tidy, but it shortens your credit history and shrinks your available credit, nudging utilisation up. Unless a card charges an annual fee or tempts you into debt, keep it open and use it for a small recurring purchase — a streaming subscription, say — paid off by direct debit each month.
6. If You're Starting From Scratch, Build Credit Deliberately
A "thin file" — little or no credit history — scores poorly even with no missed payments, because lenders have nothing to judge. Credit builder cards from providers like Aqua, Vanquis or Capital One exist for exactly this: low limits (often £200–£500), high APRs (frequently 30%+), so the strategy is to use them for small purchases and clear the balance in full every month. Do that and you pay zero interest while stacking up months of positive payment history. Rent reporting services like CreditLadder can also add your rent payments to your file.
7. Space Out Credit Applications
Every formal application leaves a hard search on your file, and several in a short window looks desperate to lenders. Use eligibility checkers first — they run soft searches that don't affect your score — and leave around three months between applications where you can.
How Long Does It Take?
Honest answer: quick wins (electoral roll, error fixes, utilisation) show up in one to three months. Rebuilding after missed payments or defaults takes longer — most people see meaningful improvement within six to twelve months of consistent good habits. There's no legal shortcut, and any company promising to "wipe" accurate bad marks for a fee is selling something that doesn't exist.
A better score pairs well with a safety net — see our guide to building an emergency fund from scratch (https://eight2infinity.com/how-to-build-emergency-fund-from-scratch/), and find more in our business and finance (https://eight2infinity.com/category/business-and-finance/) section.
FAQ
What's the fastest way to raise my credit score?
Register on the electoral roll and pay down card balances below 25% utilisation. Both can move your score within a month or two.
Does checking my own credit score lower it?
No. Checking your own report is a soft search and never affects your score, no matter how often you look.
How long do missed payments stay on my file?
Most negative marks, including missed payments and defaults, remain on your report for six years — though their impact fades as newer positive history builds on top.
Which credit score do lenders actually use?
None of the consumer scores directly. Lenders apply their own scoring models to the raw data in your reports. The Experian, Equifax and TransUnion scores are useful indicators of the same underlying data, which is why keeping the data clean matters more than any single number.










