There wasn’t one moment in particular that improved Johanna’s credit situation. No single action flipped a switch, and no magic overnight fix solved it all.
Instead, her progress came from something much quieter – staying consistent, following a plan, and working through each step even when the path wasn’t perfectly clear.
Johanna was referred to CredEvolv by her loan officer at Paramount Residential Mortgage Group (PRMG) at a point that feels familiar to many borrowers. She wasn’t starting from scratch, but she wasn’t where she needed or wanted to be, either. Her credit profile included collections, late payments, and high balances. More than anything, she was just unclear about what would actually make a difference.
Her starting scores reflected that:
TransUnion: 518
Equifax: 538
Experian: 570
Finding direction
What changed for Johanna wasn’t just the numbers – it was having direction.
She began working with a HUD-certified nonprofit credit counselor in our network, focusing on the core factors that would improve her credit profile over time. That meant addressing negative items the right way, bringing attention to payment history, and steadily paying down balances.
Early progress came in small ways. Accounts were updated. Disputes were initiated. Conversations started to turn into action.
Then, the momentum began to build.
Progress that started to compound
A key turning point was the removal of a $974 Verizon collection across all three credit bureaus, creating a meaningful shift in her report.
At the same time, she worked to bring her credit utilization down, moving from as high as 38% to significantly lower levels over time.
It may seem unexciting, but these were simple, steady improvements that started to compound.
Not a perfect line – but a real one
Her journey wasn’t a straight line.
There were moments where scores dipped or new activity temporarily impacted her profile. But those moments didn’t erase the progress – they became part of the process.
And that’s what made the difference.
Instead of stopping, she adjusted and kept moving forward.
The results
Over time, the work she did with her counselor added up, and her scores improved drastically:
TransUnion: 518 → 668
Equifax: 538 → 653
Experian: 570 → 660
More importantly, her new scores reflected stability.
Full circle moment
Johanna went back to the same loan officer who first referred her, hopeful that she could now qualify for a loan. And this time, she was approved.
With a stronger credit profile and a clearer financial foundation, she was able to move forward – and ultimately purchase her home.
Final thought
Johanna’s story is a reminder that credit improvement rarely comes from one big moment.
It comes from showing up, putting in some effort, making adjustments, and having the patience to allow progress to take shape over time.
And sometimes, the most important part of the journey is what we are taught as kids – that good things are worth the hard work and effort.
