Your credit score affects almost every major financial decision in your life — buying a home, getting a car loan, renting an apartment, and even landing certain jobs. If your score is low, it can feel like the system is working against you. But the good news is that credit can be repaired, and it does not have to take years.
At JRICKSS Financial Services, we have helped hundreds of clients in New Jersey raise their credit scores by 50 to 200 points. Here is a practical guide to fixing your credit in 2026, based on the same strategies we use with our clients every day.
Before you can fix anything, you need to know what is on your credit report. Under federal law, you are entitled to one free credit report per year from each of the three major bureaus: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. You can get all three at AnnualCreditReport.com — this is the only official site authorized by the federal government.
Pull all three reports and review them carefully. Look for accounts you do not recognize, incorrect balances, late payments that were actually on time, and any accounts that should have aged off (most negative items fall off after 7 years).
If you find errors — and most people do — you have the legal right to dispute them. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), credit bureaus must investigate your dispute within 30 days and remove any information they cannot verify.
You can file disputes online through each bureau’s website, by mail, or by working with a credit repair professional. When disputing, be specific: identify the exact account, explain what is wrong, and include any supporting documents.
Your credit utilization ratio — the percentage of your available credit that you are using — accounts for about 30% of your credit score. If you have a credit card with a $1,000 limit and a $900 balance, your utilization is 90%, which is hurting your score badly.
The goal is to get your utilization below 30%, and ideally below 10%. If you cannot pay off cards in full, focus on the ones with the highest utilization first. Even small payments can make a noticeable difference.
The length of your credit history matters. Closing an old credit card reduces your total available credit and shortens your average account age, both of which can lower your score. Even if you do not use an old card anymore, keep it open (as long as there is no annual fee).
Payment history is the single biggest factor in your credit score — it accounts for 35%. One missed payment can drop your score by 50 to 100 points. Set up autopay for at least the minimum payment on every account so you never miss a due date again.
If someone you trust (a family member, spouse, or close friend) has a credit card with a long history and low balance, ask them to add you as an authorized user. Their positive payment history on that account gets added to your credit report, which can boost your score quickly. You do not even have to use the card.
Every time you apply for new credit, a hard inquiry appears on your report and can lower your score by a few points. While one inquiry is not a big deal, multiple inquiries in a short period signal risk to lenders. Only apply for credit when you actually need it.
Most people start seeing improvements within 30 to 90 days of taking action, especially after disputes are resolved and balances are paid down. Significant improvements (100+ points) typically take 3 to 6 months of consistent effort.
The key is consistency. Credit repair is not a one-time fix — it is a process. But every step you take moves you closer to better rates, better loan terms, and more financial freedom.
If your credit is holding you back from buying a home, getting approved for a loan, or just having peace of mind, we can help. At JRICKSS Financial Services, we offer professional credit repair services that include a full credit report analysis, dispute filing with all three bureaus, personalized action plans, and ongoing monitoring.
Call us at (844) 200-8027 or visit our office at 34 Prospect St, Unit 10, East Orange, NJ 07017 to schedule your free credit review.
This article is for informational purposes only. Credit repair results vary by individual. All information is based on publicly available guidance from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and Federal Trade Commission (FTC).