Credit success rarely comes from one big move. More often, it’s the result of steady decisions, clear guidance, and staying the course — even when progress isn’t immediate.
That’s exactly how Chad S. reached homeownership.
Referred by his loan officer at AnnieMac Home Mortgage, Chad was close to qualifying for a mortgage, but not quite there. His credit scores were hovering in the low-to-mid 600s. And while that showed potential, it wasn’t enough to move forward with confidence.
Instead of being told to wait and hope for the best, Chad was connected through the CredEvolv platform to a nonprofit credit counselor and given a clear plan to become mortgage-ready.
Starting point: close doesn’t always mean ready
At the beginning of his journey, Chad’s credit profile looked familiar to many borrowers:
Credit scores in the low 600s
Credit utilization fluctuating month to month
Collections and negative items still reporting
Active accounts impacting how lenders viewed overall risk
There wasn’t a single issue holding Chad back. It was the combination of payment history, utilization, and how certain accounts were reporting across the credit bureaus.
What Chad needed wasn’t a quick fix — it was structure.
The focus: what actually moves a credit score
Early on, Chad and his counselor aligned on the credit factors that matter most to mortgage lenders.
The plan centered on:
Protecting and strengthening on-time payment history
Managing credit utilization intentionally, not reactively
Actively challenging collections, charge-offs, and inaccurate reporting
Understanding how changes would show up on each bureau
Chad was also coached on what to expect during the process — including mailed notices and verification codes from the credit bureaus — so nothing slowed progress or created confusion.
Every step had a purpose. Every action tied back to mortgage readiness.
Staying the course when progress isn’t perfect
One of the most important parts of Chad’s credit success was understanding that credit improvement is not linear.
There were months when:
Scores dipped due to higher balances
An auto loan stopped reporting on one bureau
A collection changed status before being fully resolved
New inquiries temporarily impacted scores
Instead of getting discouraged, Chad stayed engaged and kept moving forward.
Momentum builds over time
As the months progressed, Chad’s steady effort began to show real results.
Key milestones included:
A collection account deleted from all three bureaus
A charge-off fully removed
Multiple credit limit increases, improving utilization
Credit utilization reduced from the high-20% range down to 17%
Continued positive reporting from consistent on-time payments
Chad’s credit profile reflected meaningful, lender-relevant progress:
Equifax: 680
TransUnion: 671
Experian: 664
This wasn’t just improvement on paper — it was mortgage readiness.
The outcome: approved and clear to close
With stronger scores, cleaner credit, and documented progress across all three bureaus, Chad reached the milestone he had been working toward.
He was approved for his home loan.
After months of steady effort and guidance, Chad didn’t just raise his credit score — he turned credit progress into a real closing date.
“Thank you for all your help.” – Chad S.
