Some people never check their credit score until a loan gets rejected.
Others refresh their score every week and panic over every 5-point move.
Both extremes create problems.
Let’s find a middle path.
You don’t check your score to feel happy or sad.
You check it to:
· spot big changes you didn’t expect,
· catch errors or fraud early,
· see if you’re in a reasonable zone for any big plan (home loan, business loan, etc.).
Small day-to-day movements don’t matter much.
For most people:
· Once or twice a year is enough as a basic health check.
· Check before a big application (home loan, big top-up, business expansion).
· Check after you solve a serious issue (closure, settlement, dispute) to confirm it’s reflected.
If you’re in the middle of stress (restructuring, big business hit), you may want to check a bit more often for a while – but still with purpose.
· It doesn’t speed up updates.
· It doesn’t improve the score by itself.
· It doesn’t tell lenders anything new.
If you’re pulling your score every few days, you’re just increasing your own anxiety.
· Checking very often, then taking impulsive decisions (“I’ll close all cards today”).
· Never checking, then discovering old, uncorrected issues only when it’s too late.
· Assuming the score will jump overnight after one good action.
· Set a simple rule for yourself:
– once every 6 or 12 months as routine,
– plus once before a big loan,
– plus once after a big cleanup or dispute.
· When you do check, note key changes: new accounts, closures, any late marks.
· If you see a big, unexplained drop, don’t panic. Pull the full report and look for:
– new late payments,
– new accounts you didn’t open,
– status changes.
Your credit score is like a health report.
Checking it too rarely is careless. Checking it every week doesn’t make you healthier.
A steady rhythm, combined with steady behaviour, is more powerful than any app notification.