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Home›Personal Finance›Credit & Debt›Debt & Credit

What Is Credit Utilization?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
1 source2 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Credit utilization = Total balance / Total credit limit
  • Keep utilization below 30% to avoid credit score damage
  • High utilization signals financial stress to lenders
  • Paying down balances is the fastest way to improve credit scores
On this page
  • Calculation
  • Impact on Credit Scores
  • Why It Matters
  • The Fast Fix
  • Request Higher Limits

Credit utilization is the percentage of your total available credit that you're currently using.

Calculation

You have three credit cards:

  • Card A: $3,000 limit, $1,500 balance
  • Card B: $2,000 limit, $0 balance
  • Card C: $5,000 limit, $2,000 balance

Total limit: $10,000 Total balance: $3,500 Utilization: $3,500 / $10,000 = 35%

Impact on Credit Scores

Credit utilization accounts for 30% of your credit score.

  • Below 10%: Excellent (shows control)
  • 10-30%: Good (healthy, recommended)
  • 30-50%: Fair (starting to hurt score)
  • 50-100%: Poor (signals financial stress)

A score of 740 can drop to 700+ with one card maxed out (100% utilization on that card).

Why It Matters

High utilization signals financial stress to lenders: "This person is using most of their available credit, suggesting they're near their limit."

Low utilization signals control: "This person has credit available but doesn't need to use it."

The Fast Fix

Utilization updates monthly. If you reduce balances below 30% of limits, your score increases within 30 days (next reporting cycle).

A $500 payment reducing a $3,000 balance from $2,500 (83% utilization) to $2,000 (67% utilization) immediately improves scores when reported.

Paying off high utilization accounts is the fastest way to improve credit scores short-term.

Request Higher Limits

Requesting credit limit increases without hard inquiries increases available credit without adding balance, reducing utilization.

$2,500 balance on $3,000 limit (83%) becomes $2,500 on $5,000 limit (50%) with one call to your issuer.

◆ Sources

  1. Credit Utilization Ratio — Investopedia
On this page
  • Calculation
  • Impact on Credit Scores
  • Why It Matters
  • The Fast Fix
  • Request Higher Limits
◆ Related reading
  • APR, APY & the True Cost of Borrowing
  • Good Debt vs. Bad Debt
  • What Is a Debt-to-Income Ratio?
  • Debt-to-Income Ratio
All Debt & Credit →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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