Over the years, Absolute Protection has helped thousands of families and business owners strengthen their financial foundation. Every client’s story is different – but the goal is always the same: progress, clarity, and confidence in every decision. These are just a few examples of how the right strategy and transparent guidance can create real change.
Every success story begins with one decision – the decision to move forward. If you’re ready to take control of your credit, funding and financial future, our team is ready to support you.
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FICO vs VantageScore: The Complete Breakdown
Here’s that detailed explanation about the credit score system and how it really works behind the scenes.
What These Names Actually Mean
FICO = Fair Isaac Corporation
VantageScore = Just a brand name (not an acronym)
How the Consumer Score “Scheme” Actually Works
Your frustration is 100% valid – here’s exactly how this system is designed to confuse and profit:
Those free credit apps (Credit Karma, Credit Sesame, etc.) primarily show VantageScore because it runs 20-40 points higher than FICO for most people. Why?
The Psychology: Higher score = you feel better about your credit = more likely to apply for cards through their affiliate links = they make $50-200+ per approval
The Reality: That 740 VantageScore might be a 695 FICO when you actually apply for a mortgage
These older models are way more conservative and harder to score well on. Lenders resist upgrading because:
Right now there are like 10+ different scoring models in active use:
This isn’t an accident. More scores = more confusion = lenders can pick whichever one gives them the most conservative result to justify their pricing.
Here’s the kicker: No federal law requires lenders to tell you which score they actually used when they approve/deny you or set your rate.
So you’re flying blind while they have all the information.
The Money Trail
This whole system exists to generate profit:
Credit Apps: Make money from affiliate commissions when you apply for cards Lenders: Can use conservative scores for actual decisions while you see optimistic scores elsewhere
Credit Bureaus: Sell multiple versions of scores to different industries
Bottom Line
The system isn’t broken – it’s working exactly as designed. It’s built for profit, not transparency.
Hope this helps explain why the whole thing feels so frustrating and confusing – because it’s literally designed that way!
Many free credit apps only show data from one bureau (sometimes two). However, lenders review reports from all three bureaus: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion.
Important:
If you are monitoring only one bureau, you may miss negative activity.
For accurate oversight, you should maintain access to full three-bureau reporting.
Our Basic Credit Protection Plan ($39/month) provides:
Even after your credit improves, we recommend reviewing your profile at least once or twice per year to ensure nothing unexpected is reporting. Credit protection is not a one-time event – it is ongoing maintenance.
Once your credit begins improving, your priority shifts from rebuilding to protecting. Even with good scores, lenders may reduce limits or deny approvals if risk signals appear.
Avoid the Following:
Important:
Credit is not just about score – it is about stability and lender confidence.
A strong profile is built slowly, maintained consistently, and protected strategically.
For any credit or financing application, all information must reflect your actual, truthful circumstances and must be accurate and verifiable. Never enter estimated or suggested figures that do not match your real income or living expenses.
When completing applications, use:
Consistency across applications is important to prevent data conflicts, but accuracy must always come first.
If you have questions about how income types (salary, self-employment revenue, bonuses, spousal income, etc.) can be legally reported on applications, we can help review each application to ensure your entries are compliant and correctly supported by documentation.
Understanding reporting timing is critical for credit growth.
Statement Date vs. Due Date
Most banks report the balance that appears on your statement closing date to the credit bureaus – not the balance on your due date. If your balance is high on the statement date, it may lower your score, even if you pay it off in full later.
Recommended Payment Strategy
Example
Important:
Never miss a payment. Never carry high balances. Never max out cards.
To qualify for stronger funding programs, your personal credit profile should meet the
following benchmarks:
Why it matters:
Even with good scores, lenders often reduce approvals when utilization is high or too many
accounts are open, or overall credit history is limited.