A new FICO credit score, launching in 2019, could be good news for consumers who don't quite have the credit scores they need to qualify for a financial product or for the terms they were hoping for.
The UltraFICO score is an opt-in credit model that uses information from your checking, savings or money market accounts to supplement data already in your credit report. It's meant to boost your existing FICO score, which ranges from 300 to 850.
If you are already in the excellent credit range and don't need additional points for approval or to qualify for the best terms, it won't be offered to you. But this supplemental information can be especially helpful for consumers with scores in the upper 500s to lower 600s, considered bad to fair credit.
The UltraFICO score — distributed by credit bureau Experian — will be pilot-tested "at a handful of lenders," including online, nontraditional lenders as well as credit unions, starting in early 2019, said David Shellenberger, senior director of scores and predictive analytics at FICO.
Here are answers to some common questions about the new credit score:
Who will the UltraFico score help in the future?'
The UltraFICO score, Shellenberger said, is almost like a "second-chance score" that tends to benefit consumers with "thin" files or little credit history and those trying to rebuild after a personal financial crisis.
Credit newbies are more likely to see a significant benefit, assuming they have not had a negative account balance in the past three months and maintain a savings balance of $400 or more.
Shellenberger said 40 percent of credit newbies saw an increase of 20 points or more. Among those with previous financial distress — such as an account in collections — one in 10 saw an increase of 20 points or more, he said.