A credit score higher than 750 usually means you will be approved for the lowest finance rates on purchases like mortgages and vehicles. A credit score less than that will likely mean you'll have to pay higher interest rates or settle for less than the best terms on your loan.

www.myFICO.com reports that the median credit score in the United States. is 723 meaning 50 of Americans have a credit score below 723. When accounting for people with a credit score between 723 and 750, most people in the U.S. have credit scores that will likely exclude them from getting approved for the best interest rates.

And increased finance rates are not the only consequence of a less than idea. The credit crisis has caused banks and other lenders to become much more conservative with their lending practices. Just a few years ago, people with sub 600 credit scores could still get approved for loans and other credit account, even if it was restricted to non-traditional home loans and sub-prime credit cards. Today, financial institutions are no longer willing to extend credit to high risk individuals. Many people with bad credit are now unable to get approved for loans because of their low credit scores.

Fortunately for people who have credit scores with room for improvement, there is something that can be done. A growing number of Americans are discovering things that can be done to legally
fix up their credit
.

Join the thousands who fixed their credit scores

The credit reporting system is not perfect. Credit reporting errors, math based assumptions, and irrelevant data all contribute to a system that can make it look like trustworthy borrowers who can be counted on to repay their debts are unworthy of credit.

If you are in a position where your credit reports are making you look like a higher credit risk than you truly are, you may be able to improve your credit score by fixing up your credit reports.

The FCRA gives you the right to dispute any information in your credit reports you feel may be inaccurate, untimely, misleading, biased, incomplete or unverifiable ("questionable"). In essence, you have the right to dispute the questionable negative information recorded in your credit reports you feel are giving lenders, insurance companies, potential employers, etc. an inaccurate or incomplete impression of your true credit risk.

You can work to fix credit report on your own or with the help of a credit correction company like Lexington Law. Since 1991, Lexington Law has been helping clients dispute the questionable negative items in their credit reports and has produced life changing results time and time again.