Talk of The Villages Florida

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-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   The Villages ranked #1 in credit scores (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/villages-ranked-1-credit-scores-306551/)

manaboutown 05-16-2020 06:56 PM

The Villages ranked #1 in credit scores
 
Why am I not surprised?

Average FICO score in TV - 785!

The 5 US cities with the best credit scores | Fox Business

dewilson58 05-16-2020 07:20 PM

credit scores for the old is pretty close to worthless

Boilerman 05-16-2020 08:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766143)
credit scores for the old is pretty close to worthless

Credit scores are commonly used by insurance companies as a factor in premiums. A higher credit score can mean a lower premium.

twoplanekid 05-16-2020 08:56 PM

Interesting to note that The Villages population is 4 to 5 times the size of 3 of the cities listed and more than twice the size of the remaining one.

dewilson58 05-16-2020 09:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boilerman (Post 1766195)
Credit scores are commonly used by insurance companies as a factor in premiums. A higher credit score can mean a lower premium.




Absolutely false.

Topspinmo 05-16-2020 09:02 PM

I sure the villages No. 1 in many things, softball, pickleball, and of course golf comes to mind. My credit rating probably pretty low haven’t had loan or borrowed money for at least 10 years. I hate paying interest.:duck: I know hate is such a hideous word.

Topspinmo 05-16-2020 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766205)
Absolutely false.


But, higher credit score can get you lower interest loan, so they say?

Stu from NYC 05-16-2020 09:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766205)
Absolutely false.

I believe that it is true

CWGUY 05-16-2020 09:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stuart Zaikov (Post 1766214)
I believe that it is true

I agree - Car Insurance Myths: Credit Score Does Not Affect Rate | Esurance :ho:

Topspinmo 05-16-2020 09:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CWGUY (Post 1766221)

But, it affects if they offer to insure you.

CWGUY 05-16-2020 09:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 1766223)
But, it affects if they offer to insure you.

:ho: Click and read the link. The title of the link is "Credit Score Does Not Affect Rate" But the link explains it does.

Chatbrat 05-17-2020 06:06 AM

The only thing you can say about credit scores--the people with the highest scores-don't need it, really wonder the percentage of people in in TV with no mortages, pay their monthly expenses via auto pay from bank/brokerage accounts via debits from their checking accounts, expenses such as credit card charges, utilities, sunpass, insurance--love it when life is on auto pilot

Only time to write a check- to IRS, DMV & local tax

Goldwingnut 05-17-2020 06:13 AM

It shouldn't be much of a surprise that The Villages tops the list. A lot of very smart people live here, people who were wise with their money, saved, lived on what they earned, and planned for their future and retirements. The number on the list that also isn't surprising is the average debt, the residents here have a fraction of the debt that the others on the list have, mainly due to no mortgages on many of the homes here.

The high FICO score is a fools dream, a grab to be the highest ranking slave. The real superstars are those who live here without a credit score, who've gone without borrowing money or a line of credit of any kind for the last year or more, they pay cash for everything (debit card is the same as cash and is not credit), these are the true masters of their own money and destiny.

Chatbrat 05-17-2020 06:27 AM

Excellent post Goldwingnut--when i was young the following was drummed into my head"interest keeps poor people poor, while it makes rich people richer"

Also, looking at the 3 cities from the people's republic of California--their debt is twice their income--they are living on the ragged edge--bet the Covid crisis has them buy stock in DEPENDS

caseycasebeer 05-17-2020 06:52 AM

Just a thought (not on scores, but somewhat related):

If your OUTFLOW
Exceeds your INCOME,
Your UPKEEP
Will be your DOWNFALL.

La lamy 05-17-2020 06:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldwingnut (Post 1766317)
It shouldn't be much of a surprise that The Villages tops the list. A lot of very smart people live here, people who were wise with their money, saved, lived on what they earned, and planned for their future and retirements. The number on the list that also isn't surprising is the average debt, the residents here have a fraction of the debt that the others on the list have, mainly due to no mortgages on many of the homes here.

The high FICO score is a fools dream, a grab to be the highest ranking slave. The real superstars are those who live here without a credit score, who've gone without borrowing money or a line of credit of any kind for the last year or more, they pay cash for everything (debit card is the same as cash and is not credit), these are the true masters of their own money and destiny.

I've been debt free for many years now, but I still use a credit card and pay it down every month. That way I still have a credit score, and get dividends pay back on what I spend. Win win.

GoodLife 05-17-2020 07:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldwingnut (Post 1766317)
The high FICO score is a fools dream, a grab to be the highest ranking slave. The real superstars are those who live here without a credit score, who've gone without borrowing money or a line of credit of any kind for the last year or more, they pay cash for everything (debit card is the same as cash and is not credit), these are the true masters of their own money and destiny.

Not so sure paying cash for everything is the smart play, I pay for everything possible with credit card, then pay entire balance at end of month. Zero interest paid, and I keep my cash where it's earning me something for an extra 30 days.

retiredguy123 05-17-2020 07:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GoodLife (Post 1766351)
Not so sure paying cash for everything is the smart play, I pay for everything possible with credit card, then pay entire balance at end of month. Zero interest paid, and I keep my cash where it's earning me something for an extra 30 days.

I do the same thing. Pay for almost everything with a credit card. Never pay interest. To me, the biggest advantage is that you have 60 days to dispute a charge for a defective product or non-performance, even if you have paid off the account. You don't have the same protection with a debit card.

GoodLife 05-17-2020 07:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by retiredguy123 (Post 1766362)
I do the same thing. Pay for almost everything with a credit card. Never pay interest. To me, the biggest advantage is that you have 60 days to dispute a charge for a defective product or non-performance, even if you have paid off the account. You don't have the same protection with a debit card.

Yep, good point.

Chatbrat 05-17-2020 07:27 AM

Also credit cards can give 5% cash back on groceries, cable/steaming. gasoline, dining varies minimum 2% cash back--by playing it smart you get several thousand dollars a year free cash by using credit cards smartly and if you sign up for new credit cards you'll get $150-$200 per card but it will be taxable, after you meet their minimum purchase requirements-stop using them and put them in your safe

Boilerman 05-17-2020 07:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766205)
Absolutely false.

Here are three of of many links to articles that explain that higher credit scores lower insurance premiums.

How do my insurance scores affect my car insurance rates? – Credit Karma

How a Credit Score Affects Your Car Insurance - Consumer Reports

How credit scores affect car insurance – Nationwide

GoodLife 05-17-2020 07:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chatbrat (Post 1766382)
Also credit cards can give 5% cash back on groceries, cable/steaming. gasoline, dining varies minimum 2% cash back--by playing it smart you get several thousand dollars a year free cash by using credit cards smartly and if you sign up for new credit cards you'll get $150-$200 per card but it will be taxable, after you meet their minimum purchase requirements-stop using them and put them in your safe

Also good points. I got an almost free first class ticket to Scotland by charging a dental implant on their Virgin Air rewards card. Was planning to go play golf there all summer this year but coronavirus messed up that plan. Maybe next year, hope they don't go bankrupt.

Lindsyburnsy 05-17-2020 07:43 AM

This can't be "news". You have over 100,000 people nearly all retired and over 55 living in homes, many second homes. Everybody receives SS and Medicare. Most have pensions on top of it. The Villages is a bubble of sameness. Now move around to pretty much any other city in Florida and check out their average credit score. My mother lives in an assisted living complex. Bet all of their scores are over 800, too. Same kind of a bubble as TV, just on a smaller scale.




Quote:

Originally Posted by manaboutown (Post 1766137)
Why am I not surprised?

Average FICO score in TV - 785!

The 5 US cities with the best credit scores | Fox Business


Boilerman 05-17-2020 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chatbrat (Post 1766382)
Also credit cards can give 5% cash back on groceries, cable/steaming. gasoline, dining varies minimum 2% cash back--by playing it smart you get several thousand dollars a year free cash by using credit cards smartly and if you sign up for new credit cards you'll get $150-$200 per card but it will be taxable, after you meet their minimum purchase requirements-stop using them and put them in your safe

I agree. We’re debt free but use a no-fee credit card whenever we can. Benefits are:

- cash back on all purchases
- ability to dispute charges if product or service is defective
- maintain high credit score for lower insurance premiums
- delays payment by 30+ days
- not having to carry around lots of cash
- faster payment in retail stores

IMO, it’s a no-brainer

Chatbrat 05-17-2020 08:03 AM

Chase Freedom card gives 5% back at various stores /services per qtr/ it varies--Sam's Club MC 5 % back on gas and 2% back on dining, TD Visa 1.5 % on all purchases + another 10% if the cash back is deposited in your TD account (1.65%) total, Suncoast Credit Union car 2% back on all grocery purchases--if you make pit stops @ Wawa use your Sam's club MC you'll get 5% since its a gas station and all of these cards have no fee

Joe C. 05-17-2020 08:20 AM

I grew up poor -- dirt poor. Parents never even had a credit card. And "second mortgage" was a term that was like a death sentence.

HOWEVER -- When I got married, I agreed with my wife to get only one credit card, because we realized that in order to get a mortgage, we needed a good credit rating. I told her that we had to pay our bills on time and NEVER to exceed our limit. We have, over the last 48 years, paid our bills on time, and as a result have a high score (higher than the villages by a long shot).
OH..BTW, we get enough points to fly for free when we go on vacation.

The key is to pay your balance monthly and avoid the interest charge.

davem4616 05-17-2020 08:57 AM

Not surprised with the average FICO rate for TV....we all played the game to win and we're now able to enjoy the good life

I feel blessed to frankly not give a damn about my FICO score....at this stage in my life it means nothing

we live debt free....use a no fee credit card that gives us 2% back on everything....already have enough air miles/hotel points to do what I choose....

we can't spend what we take in every month...so we give back to those in need

heck even when we donate to the Salvation Army with that credit card and get 2% back (and we pay their merchant fee cost too)

it's all good

dewilson58 05-17-2020 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boilerman (Post 1766386)




Read the articles and you will learn.

The first report is self-serving. They are a credit reporting service. Duh!!!
The other two reports indicate a carrier might look at credit history, NOT CREDIT SCORE. The number, the score is not used.

Westie Man 05-17-2020 09:25 AM

I lived in a bldg in Florida back in the 90's
 
with a neighbour on auto-pay and an AC on auto. He lay dead in his apartment for a year before his mummified body was found.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Chatbrat (Post 1766310)
The only thing you can say about credit scores--the people with the highest scores-don't need it, really wonder the percentage of people in in TV with no mortages, pay their monthly expenses via auto pay from bank/brokerage accounts via debits from their checking accounts, expenses such as credit card charges, utilities, sunpass, insurance--love it when life is on auto pilot

Only time to write a check- to IRS, DMV & local tax


biker1 05-17-2020 09:33 AM

We hardly ever use cash. Everything goes on a credit card and we pay the balance every month. Why? Four reasons: you get points/money back from credit card companies, you can dispute the charge if things goes south with a purchase, you will often get an extra year of warranty with appliance purchases, and you can often get included travel insurance.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldwingnut (Post 1766317)
It shouldn't be much of a surprise that The Villages tops the list. A lot of very smart people live here, people who were wise with their money, saved, lived on what they earned, and planned for their future and retirements. The number on the list that also isn't surprising is the average debt, the residents here have a fraction of the debt that the others on the list have, mainly due to no mortgages on many of the homes here.

The high FICO score is a fools dream, a grab to be the highest ranking slave. The real superstars are those who live here without a credit score, who've gone without borrowing money or a line of credit of any kind for the last year or more, they pay cash for everything (debit card is the same as cash and is not credit), these are the true masters of their own money and destiny.


dewilson58 05-17-2020 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by biker1 (Post 1766535)
We hardly ever use cash. Everything goes on a credit card and we pay the balance every month. Why? Four reasons: you get points/money back from credit card companies, you can dispute the charge if things goes south with a purchase, you will often get an extra year of warranty with appliance purchases, and you can often get included travel insurance.


Yep, Yep, Yep & Yep

:bigbow:


My card also provides insurance on your car rental if the rental is charged on their card.

rrb48310 05-17-2020 10:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by La lamy (Post 1766342)
I've been debt free for many years now, but I still use a credit card and pay it down every month. That way I still have a credit score, and get dividends pay back on what I spend. Win win.


:icon_wink: Agree use other people’s money, get rewards. Why cash in investments earning 8 plus percent, and pay income tax when you can get a loan under four percent. That’s at least a four percent gain.

noslices1 05-17-2020 10:59 AM

It will get you a good interest rate if you buy a new car, or if you shop for auto insurance.

noslices1 05-17-2020 11:12 AM

I am debt free, but use credit cards every month. AMEX card gives me 6% back on all the groceries I buy and when I buy a $50 Gas Card from Publix for $40, I get another 6% off the $40. When I go out to eat, and get Military discounts and BOGO’s and other special meal deals, I get 3% cash back with my B of A Master Card. Also have a Chase Visa card through Amazon that I get Cash back on also. Pay them ALL off every month and some get used a lot. Last year I got $425.00 back from AMEX alone. Credit score last month 833. Paid off my car 3.25% car loan this month, 3 years early, so maybe score will go up again next month. Who knows, but I like using credit and most people do too.

huange@verizon.net 05-17-2020 11:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boilerman (Post 1766195)
Credit scores are commonly used by insurance companies as a factor in premiums. A higher credit score can mean a lower premium.

Is that what your insurance agent told you?

Velvet 05-17-2020 01:03 PM

Life is good when you don’t need to check your credit score because you already know what it is... for years.

Boilerman 05-17-2020 01:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766501)
Read the articles and you will learn.

The first report is self-serving. They are a credit reporting service. Duh!!!
The other two reports indicate a carrier might look at credit history, NOT CREDIT SCORE. The number, the score is not used.

It’s unfortunate when people here try to dispute facts and confuse everyone.

You’re saying that the credit history is important but the credit score is not? The credit score is a reflection of your credit history. Duh!!!

Even the title of all three links I provided have “credit score” in the title of the article. The second link is from Consumer Reports and the third link is from Nationwide Insurance. If you don’t think these are reputable sources, search for yourself and you’ll find dozens of other sources that all say the same thing. Your credit score affects your insurance rate.

dewilson58 05-17-2020 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boilerman (Post 1766666)
It’s unfortunate when people here try to dispute facts and confuse everyone.




It's okay, we still love you.

dewilson58 05-17-2020 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Boilerman (Post 1766666)

Even the title of all three links I provided have “credit score” in the title of the article. The second link is from Consumer Reports and the third link is from Nationwide Insurance. If you don’t think these are reputable sources, search for yourself and you’ll find dozens of other sources that all say the same thing. Your credit score affects your insurance rate.




If you read past the title, you read:
Your score is used to measure your creditworthiness—the likelihood that you’ll pay back a loan or credit-card debt. But you might not know that car insurers are also rifling through your credit files to do something completely different: to predict the odds that you’ll file a claim. And if they think that your credit isn’t up to their highest standard, they will charge you more, even if you have never had an accident, our price data show.
Cherry-picking about 30 of almost 130 elements in a credit report, each insurer creates a proprietary score that’s very different from the FICO score you might be familiar with, so that one can’t be used to guess the other reliably.


This is one example from the link you suggested.


This concludes the education for today. :1rotfl:

EdFNJ 05-17-2020 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1766205)
Absolutely false.

Actually true. There is also an "INSURANCE SCORE' which is partially derived from your CREDIT SCORE.

Edmunds

Insurance Score Definition

Edit: So by logic, your insurance score is (partially) determined by your credit (score) therefore you credit rating affects your insurance rate.


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