Personal

How to Rebuild Credit After a Tough Financial Year

Happy, couple and hug with documents at house for financial planning, bank balance or debt payment. Man, woman or paperwork for budget savings, property insurance and credit score of loan application.

A difficult financial year can happen to anyone. Job changes, medical bills, unexpected expenses, or major life transitions can all affect your credit. The good news is that a temporary setback doesn’t define your future. Learning how to rebuild credit is about consistency, patience, and having the right support.

At Eagle Bank, we work with people across New England every day who are feeling discouraged about their credit scores. Rebuilding credit is rarely about perfection — it’s about taking steady, intentional steps forward.

Here’s how to start strengthening your credit after a challenging stretch.

Step 1: Know Where You Stand

The first step to rebuilding credit is understanding your full credit profile. Obtain your credit report and review it carefully to make sure:

  • Every account listed belongs to you
  • Balances and payment histories are accurate
  • Closed accounts are correctly marked

Errors happen more often than most people realize, and correcting a mistake can give your score an immediate boost.

Step 2: Make Every Payment on Time

Payment history has the biggest impact on your credit score. Even one missed or late payment can slow your progress.

To build positive momentum:

  • Set up automatic payments for minimum balances
  • Add payment reminders for all bills
  • Prioritize on-time payments over aggressive debt payoff

Consistency matters more than speed in this stage.

Step 3: Pay Down High Balances

Credit utilization — how much of your available credit you’re using — plays a major role in scoring. The goal is to keep your balances under 30% of your total credit limits whenever possible.

Ways to approach this:

  • Focus extra payments on high-balance cards
  • Spread purchases across cards instead of maxing out one
  • Avoid closing cards after paying them down, which helps maintain your overall credit availability

As balances fall, your score may begin improving relatively quickly.

Step 4: Keep Older Accounts Open

The length of your credit history matters. Even if you aren’t actively using older cards or accounts, keeping them open — as long as they don’t carry fees — can help strengthen your credit profile by showing long-term reliability.

Step 5: Add Positive Activity Carefully

For some people, rebuilding credit means adding safe, structured activity that shows lenders you’re back on track.

Tools that can help:

  • A secured credit card with a small, manageable limit
  • A small installment loan designed for credit-building
  • Becoming an authorized user on a long-standing, well-managed account

These approaches add new positive behavior while you’re repairing past challenges.

How Long Does It Take to Rebuild Credit?

Small improvements may show within 30 to 60 days once you establish consistent payments and lower balances. More significant changes typically take 6 to 12 months of steady activity.

Rebuilding credit is a marathon, not a sprint — and that’s okay. Long-term strength develops through habits, not shortcuts.

Avoid Common Rebuilding Mistakes

People trying to rebuild credit sometimes unintentionally slow themselves down by:

  • Applying for too much new credit at once
  • Closing older accounts after paying them off
  • Skipping minimum payments while focusing only on large debts
  • Using credit repair companies that promise unrealistically fast fixes

Progress comes from disciplined, transparent strategies instead.

How Eagle Bank Can Help

At Eagle Bank, rebuilding credit starts with conversation — not judgment and not quick fixes. Our bankers take the time to understand your situation and help you develop a plan that fits your real life.

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