Re: F & F Settlement Offer Accepted - what next?
Noooo mate - never add a NOC to your credit file as this forces all applications to credit into manual review (ie an underwriter manually assesses the application) - however as explained in the past, if you do not have an NOC then after a couple of years the automated process that is credit scoring *may* not count the default, thus meaning you may get accepted whereas a manual intervention generally results in a decline due to the risk element...
In layman, if you apply to say M&S - they ask for your last 2yrs address history meaning they ONLY perform a part-credit search meaning it will look back the last 2yrs. If the last 2yrs are clean/look good then they may approve you. If you apply to most other places, it is 3yrs of addresses they ask for thus they only search 3 years. 1st Direct and some other "better" banks do/did ask for 5 years address history to get a better search but I understand 4 years is the maximum address history requested now.
Again, bear in mind it is a cost issue as a FULL 6 year search costs a lender (approximately) £5 (Equifax), £8 (Experian) & £3 (Callcredit) but 50% reduction if they do a part search, ie last 3 years etc....
Make sense?
Originally posted by caspar
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In layman, if you apply to say M&S - they ask for your last 2yrs address history meaning they ONLY perform a part-credit search meaning it will look back the last 2yrs. If the last 2yrs are clean/look good then they may approve you. If you apply to most other places, it is 3yrs of addresses they ask for thus they only search 3 years. 1st Direct and some other "better" banks do/did ask for 5 years address history to get a better search but I understand 4 years is the maximum address history requested now.
Again, bear in mind it is a cost issue as a FULL 6 year search costs a lender (approximately) £5 (Equifax), £8 (Experian) & £3 (Callcredit) but 50% reduction if they do a part search, ie last 3 years etc....
Make sense?
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