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What Is a Credit Score? How CIBIL Score Is Calculated and How It Affects Your Loans

What Is a Credit Score? How CIBIL Score Is Calculated and How It Affects Your Loans

Your credit score is the three-digit financial fingerprint that lenders check before deciding whether to trust you with their money — and at what price. In India, the most widely referenced credit score is the CIBIL Score, maintained by TransUnion CIBIL. Understanding how it is constructed, what affects it, and how to improve it is one of the most valuable financial skills you can develop.

What Is a Credit Score?

A credit score is a numerical representation of your creditworthiness — your likelihood of repaying borrowed money based on your historical financial behaviour. In India, scores range from 300 to 900. The closer to 900, the more creditworthy you appear to lenders. A score of 750 or above is widely considered excellent and unlocks the best interest rates, higher loan amounts, and faster approvals.

Credit Bureaus in India

Four credit bureaus are licensed in India: TransUnion CIBIL (most widely used), Experian, Equifax, and CRIF High Mark. Each maintains independent credit records and generates its own score. While the same underlying data drives all four, minor differences between bureau scores are common. Most Indian banks primarily use CIBIL.

How Is Your CIBIL Score Calculated?

Factor Weight What It Measures
Payment History ~35% Whether you’ve paid all EMIs and credit card dues on time
Credit Utilisation ~30% Percentage of available credit limit currently in use
Credit History Length ~15% How long your oldest credit account has been open
Credit Mix ~10% Balance between secured (home/car loans) and unsecured (cards/personal loans) credit
New Credit Enquiries ~10% Number of recent hard enquiries from loan/card applications

CIBIL Score Ranges Explained

Score Range Category Impact on Loan Application
750–900 Excellent Best rates, high approval probability, premium products accessible
700–749 Good Approved at competitive rates; minor scrutiny possible
650–699 Fair Approved but at above-market rates; conditions may apply
600–649 Poor Likely rejection or only high-cost products available
300–599 Very Poor Rejected by mainstream lenders; may need secured products only

What Hurts Your Credit Score

  • Missing an EMI or credit card payment — even by one day, even once
  • Keeping credit card utilisation above 40–50%
  • Multiple loan applications within a short period (multiple hard enquiries)
  • Closing your oldest credit card or account
  • Having no credit history at all (scores are -1 or NH/NA for new credit users)
  • Loan settlements (paid less than full outstanding — marks as “Settled” not “Closed”)

How to Build Credit From Zero

Students and young earners with no credit history face a classic catch-22: they need credit to build a score, but lenders won’t give credit without a score. The solution: start with a secured credit card (backed by a fixed deposit). Use it for small regular expenses, pay the full bill each month, and within 6–12 months you will have a meaningful credit history. Check your estimated score with our Credit Score Estimator.

How Your Credit Score Affects Interest Rates: A Real Example

On a ₹40 lakh home loan over 20 years:

  • 750+ score → 8.50% p.a. → EMI: ₹34,748 | Total interest: ₹43.4 lakh
  • 680 score → 9.25% p.a. → EMI: ₹36,621 | Total interest: ₹47.9 lakh

Difference: ₹4.5 lakh in additional interest — purely due to credit score. Model this with our Loan EMI Calculator.

Related Calculators

Disclaimer: Credit scoring methodologies are proprietary and may vary across bureaus. Check your official CIBIL report at cibil.com for accurate information.

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