This article was originally published on April 8, 2025, and was updated as of December 1, 2025 to reflect timely credit information.
Key takeaways about checking your credit:
Knowing your credit score gives you control when buying a home, financing a car, or improving your financial life.
Checking your own credit score does not hurt your credit.
Regular monitoring helps you spot identity theft, errors, and fraud early.
If your credit score is lower than you hoped, you can improve it — and CredEvolv connects you with the nonprofit support that helps make it happen.
Checking your credit score isn’t usually on anyone’s list of fun activities. It tends to sit near tasks like cleaning out the garage or dealing with insurance paperwork. But here’s the truth — checking your credit score often is one of the simplest and smartest moves you can make for your long-term financial health.
You don’t need to wait until you’re applying for a mortgage or shopping for a car. You don’t need to do it only when something feels “off.” Regular credit checks give you visibility, protection, confidence, and a roadmap to future opportunities as it’s becoming a part of financial wellness.
This guide breaks down why it’s so important to check your credit score often, how to do it safely, and how platforms like CredEvolv help you take the next step if your credit needs improvement.
The only time a credit check might affect your score is when a lender does it as part of a loan application. That’s called a hard inquiry and can cause a small, temporary dip in your score.
Does checking your credit score hurt your credit?
This is the number one question people ask — and one of the biggest credit score myths online.
The answer is simple. Checking your own credit score does not hurt your credit.
When you log into a credit monitoring tool such as MyFICO.com or any of the three credit bureaus: Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion to check your score, this is categorized as a soft inquiry. A soft inquiry has zero impact on your credit score.
The only type of inquiry that can lower your score is a hard inquiry, which happens when a lender checks your credit as part of a loan or credit card application. Hard inquiries usually cause a small, temporary dip.
Here is what counts as a soft inquiry:
Checking your own credit score
Receiving pre-approved credit offers
Using monitoring services
Reviewing your score through your bank or credit card company
And here’s what counts as a hard inquiry :
Applying for a mortgage
Applying for a car loan
Applying for a credit card
Applying for personal financing
Checking your own score is always safe, always allowed, and always smart.
Why should you know your credit score before you borrow?
Imagine walking into a dealership not knowing the price of the car. That’s what borrowing is like when you don’t know your credit score — you’re negotiating blind.
Before you start any major financial application, knowing your score helps you:
Understand what interest rates you may qualify for
Avoid surprises at the lender’s desk
Know your approval odds in advance
Strengthen your negotiating power
Plan ahead instead of reacting afterward
Most importantly, it builds confidence. When you walk into a mortgage office or car lot already knowing where you stand, you’re in control of the process. You understand what lenders are reviewing. You can choose when to apply and how to position yourself for better terms.
And if your score isn’t where you want it to be, you give yourself time to make meaningful improvements instead of being caught off guard mid-application.
Can regular credit checks protect you from fraud and identity theft?
Yes — in fact, your credit report is often the first place fraud shows up.
When you check your credit score regularly, you can spot:
Accounts opened in your name
Credit cards you never applied for
Strange balances on unfamiliar accounts
Incorrect addresses or names
Sudden score drops
Debt you don’t recognize
Identity theft is increasing nationwide, and fraudulent accounts can stay hidden for months if you aren’t monitoring regularly. A single unfamiliar account can affect your score, your debt-to-income ratio, and even your ability to get approved for a mortgage.
Errors also happen more often than people think. Something as small as:
A duplicated account
A payment incorrectly marked late
A misspelled name
A credit line reported incorrectly
All of these can impact your score. Frequent checks let you catch mistakes before they lead to long-term damage.
What should you do if your credit score is lower than you expected?
This is one of the most common moments we see — someone checks their score for the first time in months and feels a wave of disappointment. Maybe the number dipped. Maybe it hasn’t improved. Maybe it feels stuck.
Here’s the truth: a credit score is a snapshot, not a sentence.
Every credit score can be improved. Every credit problem has a path forward.
And that’s exactly why CredEvolv exists. If your score isn’t where you want it to be, you don’t have to navigate the journey alone.
Through the CredEvolv platform, you can access:
Free education and resources on our blogs
A direct connection to nonprofit, HUD-approved credit counselors
A personalized roadmap to improve your credit
Clear steps for lowering utilization
Expert support for disputing errors
Coaching to build healthier financial habits
Unlike for-profit credit repair companies that often stretch timelines for revenue, nonprofit counselors focus on helping you improve your financial foundation as efficiently as possible — while giving you real tools and long-term strategies.
This is the key difference between credit rebuilding companies, credit repair firms, and CredEvolv: We prioritize financial growth, homeownership readiness, and long-term financial wellness over short-term fixes.
How often should you check your credit score?
There’s no penalty for checking your credit score, so you can review it as often as you want. But for most people, a simple routine works best.
A healthy monitoring schedule includes:
Checking your score every month
Reviewing your full credit report at least once a year
Reviewing your FICO score from reputable sources
Monitoring for unexpected changes
Keeping notifications turned on if your provider offers alerts.
If you’re preparing for a mortgage, rebuilding credit, or working with a counselor, you may want to check even more frequently so you can track improvements month by month.
How can credit monitoring become part of your financial routine?
Consistency is the key to staying in control of your financial future. When you make credit monitoring a habit, it becomes easier to:
Plan ahead
Respond quickly to issues
Make informed decisions
Track your progress
Stay motivated
Here are simple ways to build it into your routine:
Set a monthly reminder in your phone
Bookmark your monitoring tool
Review your credit report when you check your budget
Pair your monthly credit check with payday
Share updates with your counselor if you’re working with CredEvolv
You don’t need to spend hours on it. A few minutes a month can protect your future for years to come.
Are you ready to take the first step toward better credit?
A mystery may be entertaining on TV, but your credit should never feel like one. When you know your score, you know your options. And if you don’t love what you see, you’re not stuck — you’re just starting.
Check your credit score today.
And if you’re ready for structured support, connect with a nonprofit credit counselor through CredEvolv. You deserve a clear path forward. And we’re here to help you take it.
