Credit Score 600 — What It Means and How to Improve It
A 600 FICO score is Fair (580–669). Here is exactly what loans you qualify for, at what rates, and the step-by-step path to a higher score.
Score Category
Fair
Mortgage Rate
~7.75%
Auto Loan Rate
~12.0%
vs 800 Score (30yr)
+$91,000
What a 600 Credit Score Means for You
A 600 credit score falls in the 'Fair' range (580–669) on the standard FICO scale used by 90% of US lenders. FHA eligible. Conventional loans not yet accessible. Most credit cards will approve.
The most financially significant impact is on mortgage rates. At 600, a 30-year fixed mortgage is typically priced at around 7.750%. A borrower with an 800 score gets 6.500%. On a $300,000 loan, that gap costs $253/month more — and $91,000 extra over 30 years. That's a real number that a higher score puts back in your pocket.
Your credit score isn't fixed. It's a number calculated fresh each time a lender requests it, based on your current credit file. The five factors: payment history (35%), amounts owed/utilisation (30%), length of credit history (15%), new credit (10%), credit mix (10%). Every one of these is influenceable. Most people can move their score 50–80 points within 12 months of focused effort.
How to Improve a 600 Credit Score — Actionable Steps
- Reduce credit utilisation below 30% — ideally below 10%. If you have a $5,000 limit, keep your balance below $500 at statement close. This is the fastest lever available: results visible within one billing cycle. At a 600 score this single change can add 20–40 points.
- Never close old credit cards even if unused. Card age and total available credit are both positive factors. Closing a card raises utilisation and shortens average account age — both bad. Keep old cards open with a small monthly charge and autopay.
- Avoid applying for multiple credit products within a few months. Each hard inquiry drops your score 5–10 points and signals financial stress to lenders. Space applications at least 6 months apart.
- If you have late payments in your history, call the original creditor (not a collector) and ask for a 'goodwill adjustment' — a courtesy removal of one late payment for an otherwise good customer. Works surprisingly often on isolated incidents with long-standing accounts.
How to Check Your Credit Score for Free in the USA
You have three free credit reports per year by law at annualcreditreport.com — one from each bureau (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). These show the underlying data. For scores, free options include: Credit Karma (TransUnion + Equifax VantageScore, free always); Experian app (Experian FICO 8, free); Chase, Discover, Citi, and Bank of America all provide free monthly FICO scores in their apps even if you're not a customer of some.
Note that different lenders use different score versions. Mortgage lenders use FICO 2 (Experian), FICO 4 (TransUnion), and FICO 5 (Equifax) — older models that can differ from your FICO 8. Auto lenders often use FICO Auto Score. Credit card issuers use FICO Bankcard Scores. The free scores you see online are useful trend indicators — don't obsess over exact numbers across different sources.
Set up fraud alerts at all three bureaus if you see any unfamiliar accounts. A fraud alert is free and requires lenders to verify your identity before opening new credit. A credit freeze (also free) is stronger — it blocks all new credit applications until you lift it. If you're not actively applying for credit, a freeze is the safest protection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Tools & Guides
Disclaimer: For informational purposes only. Not financial, tax, or credit advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.