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It doesnt raise your score... you have to rebuild it.
Yes it does. Everyone is different, and the amount depends on any other positives/negatives you have on there. But I estimate anywhere between 50-75 points.
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It doesnot raise your score. To raise your score you have to be careful and pay your bills on time. You can also consult with a credit repair agency some non profit ones.
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Yes, it does raise your score, but no one can tell you how much.you'll have to re-pull your credit to find out.
Credit card companies do not release any information regarding how the credit score is calculated. That is proprietory information that they do not publish and is not available to the general public.
Remember that there is a difference between having a bankruptcy "discharged" and "coming off your credit report". They are not the same thing.
Also, lenders will hold you to a higher standard of having a perfect payment history than someone that has never had a bankruptcy...if the bankruptcy still appears on your credit report (which it will for 10 years AFTER the discharge date).
Subprime lenders will loan on anything and jack the rate up through the roof...what you want to do is get your credit in a position to be able to go with an A-paper lender for premium rates.
Yes it will, but it takes 10-years for a discharged bankruptcy to drop off your credit so the impact that it will have coming off will not be near as much as when it was added.
I would guess 45-75 points maximum depending on how you have re-established your credit after the discharge.
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