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The Definitive Guide

Everything You Need to Know About Credit Scores in India

What a credit score is, what moves it up or down, how to read your credit report, and exactly what to do to improve your number — all in one place.

Based on RBI & CIBIL guidelines
Verified credit science
Updated March 2026
50,000+ Indians helped

What Does Your Score Actually Mean?

Indian credit bureaus score you on a scale of 300–900. Here's how lenders interpret every band — and what's possible for your finances at each level.

300 500 600 700 750 900
300–499
Poor
Loan approvals very unlikely. Only secured credit (against deposits) may be accessible. Requires significant rebuilding.
500–599
Fair
Some lenders may approve at high interest rates. Limited credit card eligibility. Improvement possible within 6–12 months.
600–699
Good
Most lenders will consider you. Rates may be slightly higher than prime. Good foundation to build upon.
700–749
Very Good
Competitive loan approvals. Access to most credit cards. Small improvements can unlock significantly better rates.
750–900
Excellent
Best rates, highest limits, fastest approvals. Premium cards, large home loans, and top NBFC offers within reach.

The 5 Pillars That Build (or Break) Your Score

Your credit score is calculated from five weighted factors. Understanding each one lets you prioritise where to focus your effort.

35%
Payment History
Whether you pay EMIs, credit card bills, and loan instalments on time. A single missed payment can drop your score by 50–100 points.
30%
Credit Utilisation
How much of your available credit limit you're using. Keep this below 30% — ideally under 10% — for maximum score impact.
15%
Credit Age
The average age of all your credit accounts. Older accounts signal reliability. Never close your oldest credit card unless absolutely necessary.
10%
Credit Mix
A healthy blend of secured loans (home, auto) and unsecured credit (cards, personal loans) shows you can manage different types of credit responsibly.
10%
New Inquiries
Hard inquiries from lenders when you apply for credit. Each hard pull can lower your score by 5–10 points. Multiple applications in a short window signal risk.

How to Read Your Credit Report

Your credit report is the detailed file behind your score. Understanding its sections helps you spot errors that may be silently dragging your score down.

Personal Information
Section 1 of your credit report
Full name, DOB, PAN — verify these exactly match your identity documents. Errors here can cause your report to merge with someone else's.
Address history — older addresses should list correctly. Multiple addresses are normal.
Employment — approximate income may be listed from credit applications. Doesn't directly affect score.
Account Information
The most important section — check each account
Account status — should show "Active", "Closed", or "Settled". "Written Off" severely damages your score.
Payment history (DPD) — Days Past Due grid. Every month should show "000" or "STD" (standard). Any number means late payment.
Current balance vs. sanctioned limit — this directly feeds your utilisation ratio.
Closed accounts — positive closed accounts remain for 7 years and continue to help your score.
Enquiry Information
Hard pulls from loan / card applications
Recent hard inquiries — each one slightly lowers your score. Many in a short period signals financial stress to lenders.
Soft inquiries (like Capora's monitoring pulls) do not appear on your report and never affect your score.
Inquiries older than 2 years have minimal impact on your score and may be ignored by most lenders.

Common Errors to Look For

Studies show 1 in 5 credit reports contains an error. Spotting and disputing these can deliver a score jump within 30–45 days.

 Accounts That Aren't Yours
Sometimes another person's account (same name, different PAN) appears on your report. Raise a dispute with the bureau immediately — this is the highest-impact error to fix.
!  Incorrect Account Status
Paid-off loans still showing as "Outstanding", or settled accounts marked "Written Off". File a dispute with the lender and bureau with your No Dues Certificate or payment proof.
 Wrong Payment Status
An EMI marked late when you paid on time. Request your bank's payment records as proof and submit to the bureau's dispute portal.
 Outdated Personal Details
Old addresses, wrong employer, incorrect date of birth. These rarely affect your score directly but can complicate loan processing.
 Duplicate Accounts
The same loan listed twice — doubling your apparent outstanding debt. This artificially inflates your utilisation and suppresses your score.

Pro tip: File disputes directly at bureau websites

CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, and CRIF all have free online dispute portals. Bureaus are legally required to respond within 30 days. Capora's dispute tool pre-fills the right form for you.

Proven Ways to Boost Your Score

These are the highest-leverage actions you can take, ranked by impact. Focus on the high-impact items first for the fastest results.

High Impact

Never Miss a Payment

Payment history is the single largest factor at 35%. Even one missed payment can cause a 50–100 point drop that takes 12–24 months to fully recover from.

  • Set up ECS/auto-debit for all EMIs and credit card minimum payments
  • Pay before the due date, not on it — processing delays can cause a late mark
  • If you're struggling, call your lender for a restructuring before missing a payment
  • Set a calendar reminder 5 days before every due date
High Impact

Reduce Credit Utilisation

Using less than 30% of your credit limit — and ideally less than 10% — can add 30–70 points. This is the fastest lever you can pull.

  • Pay down balances before the statement date (not just the due date)
  • Request a credit limit increase without using the extra credit
  • Spread spending across multiple cards rather than maxing one
  • Make multiple small payments within a billing cycle
High Impact

Dispute Report Errors

Over 20% of credit reports contain errors. Finding and removing even one inaccurate negative mark can add 40–100 points — often within 30–45 days.

  • Pull free reports from all 4 bureaus annually (once free per bureau per year)
  • Look for accounts you don't recognise, wrong statuses, duplicate entries
  • Collect proof — payment receipts, NOCs, bank statements
  • Use Capora's guided dispute tool to submit to bureaus automatically
Medium Impact

Age Your Accounts

Credit age (15% of your score) rewards you for long credit histories. The biggest mistake: closing old credit cards when you get a new one.

  • Keep your oldest credit card active — even if you rarely use it
  • Make one small purchase every 6 months to prevent the card from being closed by the issuer for inactivity
  • Avoid opening many new accounts at once — it lowers average age immediately
Medium Impact

Build a Healthy Credit Mix

Having both secured loans (home, auto, gold) and unsecured credit (cards, personal loans) demonstrates you can manage different credit types responsibly.

  • Don't take loans just to improve your mix — only borrow what you need
  • A secured credit card against a fixed deposit is a safe way to build credit from scratch
  • A small credit-builder loan from an NBFC can add a new account type affordably
Lower Impact

Limit Hard Inquiries

Each loan or credit card application triggers a hard inquiry that can drop your score 5–10 points. Multiple applications signal financial stress to lenders.

  • Use eligibility checkers (soft inquiries) before applying — Capora provides this
  • Avoid applying to multiple lenders simultaneously — apply to your best-fit option first
  • Rate-shopping for a single loan (mortgage) within 14–45 days is often treated as one inquiry
  • Hard inquiry effects diminish after 12 months and vanish from the score after 24 months

Your Score Improvement Timeline

Credit improvement is not instant, but with consistent action the gains compound month over month. Here's a realistic roadmap for someone starting at 580.

Day 1
Baseline Audit
Pull all 4 bureau reports. Identify errors, missed payments, high utilisation accounts, and oldest cards.
Starting: 580
Month 1–2
File Disputes & Set Auto-Pay
Submit disputes for any errors. Set up auto-debit for all accounts. Pay down highest-utilisation cards first.
+20–40 pts after disputes resolve
Month 3–4
Utilisation Drops
Consistent on-time payments begin to register. Utilisation drops below 30% — bureaus update monthly.
+30–50 pts total
Month 5–6
Consistent Gains
Six months of perfect payment history. Account ages growing. No new hard inquiries dampening progress.
+60–90 pts total → ~640–670
Month 9–12
Breaking 700+
A full year of clean history. Prior late payments' impact fading. Utilisation optimised. Score crosses the 700 threshold.
+100–150 pts total → 700+

India's 4 Credit Bureaus — What's the Difference?

India has four RBI-licensed credit information companies. Your score can vary slightly across them. Capora monitors all four to give you the complete picture.

CIBIL
TransUnion CIBIL
Score: 300–900
The most widely used bureau in India. Most banks and NBFCs pull CIBIL first. Established in 2000. Over 600 million records.
Experian
Experian Credit Information
Score: 300–900
Global bureau with strong fintech lender adoption. Often used by newer NBFCs and digital lenders alongside CIBIL.
Equifax
Equifax Credit Information
Score: 1–999
Strong in commercial credit and used by several public sector banks. Uses a different score range — 1 to 999 rather than 300–900.
CRIF
CRIF High Mark
Score: 300–900
Specialist in microfinance and rural credit. Lenders in the MSME and agriculture sectors frequently use CRIF alongside or instead of CIBIL.

Why Your Score Differs Across Bureaus

Not every lender reports to every bureau. If your home loan lender only reports to CIBIL but not Experian, your on-time payments help your CIBIL score but not Experian. Scores can legitimately vary by 20–50 points across bureaus. Capora pulls from all four so no positive history goes uncounted.

A 20–50 point variation is completely normal
Check which bureau your target lender uses before applying
You get one free report per bureau per year

8 Credit Score Myths That Could Be Hurting You

Misinformation about credit scores is everywhere. These are the most damaging myths — and the facts that replace them.

Myth Checking your own score damages it
Fact Checking your own score is a "soft inquiry" and has absolutely zero impact on your credit score. Check it as often as you like. Only lender-initiated "hard inquiries" affect your score.
Myth A high income means a high credit score
Fact Income is not a factor in credit scoring. A high-income person who misses payments will have a poor score; a modest-income person who pays perfectly will have an excellent one.
Myth Paying the minimum due keeps your score perfect
Fact Paying only the minimum avoids a late payment mark, but it keeps your balance (and utilisation) high, which drags your score. Paying in full or significantly above minimum is always better.
Myth Closing old credit cards improves your score
Fact Closing an old card reduces your total available credit (raising utilisation) and shortens your average credit age — both of which lower your score. Keep old cards open even if unused.
Myth Settling a loan is as good as paying it off
Fact "Settled" means you paid less than the full amount owed. It stays on your report for 7 years and signals default risk. "Closed" (fully paid) is far better. Pay in full whenever possible.
Myth You only have one credit score
Fact You have a score at each of India's four credit bureaus — CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, and CRIF. Each lender may pull from a different bureau, so your scores can vary by 20–50 points.
Myth Having no debt means a perfect score
Fact No credit history = no score (or "NH" on your report). Lenders can't evaluate risk if you've never borrowed. Responsibly using and repaying credit is what builds an excellent score.
Myth Bad credit is permanent — you can't recover
Fact Most negative marks lose impact after 2 years and fall off after 7 years in India. With consistent positive behaviour, even a score in the 400s can reach 700+ within 18–24 months.

Your Credit Score Questions, Answered

How often is my credit score updated? +
Credit bureaus typically update your score once a month, after lenders submit their monthly data. If you make a significant change — like paying off a large balance — it may take 30–45 days to reflect in your score. Some lenders report as infrequently as every 45–60 days.
What credit score do I need to get a home loan in India? +
Most major banks and housing finance companies prefer a minimum CIBIL score of 700–750 for home loan approval. Scores above 750 unlock the best interest rates. Some NBFCs may approve loans for scores as low as 650 but at higher interest rates. Every 50-point improvement in your score can translate to 0.25–0.50% lower interest — on a ₹50 lakh home loan, that's ₹5–10 lakh in interest saved over 20 years.
How long do negative marks stay on my credit report? +
In India, negative information generally stays on your credit report for 7 years from the date of the delinquency. However, the practical impact diminishes significantly after 2 years of positive behaviour. A late payment from 3 years ago carries far less weight than one from 3 months ago. Defaults and "Written Off" entries are the most severe and take longest to recover from.
Does being a co-applicant or guarantor affect my score? +
Yes, significantly. As a co-applicant or guarantor, the loan appears on your credit report. If the primary borrower misses payments, your score drops too — even if you're making all your own payments perfectly on time. Be extremely careful before co-signing a loan. Capora can help you monitor any accounts where you are a co-applicant.
Why is my CIBIL score different from my Experian score? +
Each bureau has its own algorithm and may have slightly different data. Not all lenders report to all bureaus, so some accounts may be visible at CIBIL but not Experian, or vice versa. A variation of 20–50 points between bureaus is entirely normal. A large discrepancy (100+ points) could indicate an error on one bureau's file — worth investigating and disputing.
Can I build a good score with no credit history? +
Yes. The fastest ways to establish credit from scratch are: (1) Apply for a secured credit card — you deposit ₹10,000–25,000 as collateral and get a card against it. Use it for small purchases and pay in full each month. (2) Take a small credit-builder loan from an NBFC specifically designed for this purpose. (3) Ask a family member with good credit to add you as an authorised user on their credit card. Within 6–12 months of responsible use, you can achieve a score of 700+.
How do I raise a dispute with a credit bureau? +
Each bureau has a free online dispute portal: CIBIL at mycibil.com, Experian at experian.in, Equifax at equifax.co.in, and CRIF at crifhighmark.com. You fill out the dispute form, upload supporting documents (payment proof, bank statements, NOC), and submit. Bureaus are legally required to investigate and respond within 30 days. If the error is confirmed, it must be corrected. Capora's dispute filing tool automates this process and tracks the status for you.

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