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What Is Payment History?

Payment history is the record of whether a borrower has made credit payments on time, and it is the single most important factor in FICO score calculations — accounting for approximately 35% of the score. The record includes on-time payments, late payments coded by severity (30, 60, 90, 120+ days), collections, charge-offs, bankruptcies, and foreclosures. A single late payment can lower a credit score by 60 to 110 points.

Key Facts

  • Payment history carries the largest weight in FICO scoring at 35% — more than any other single factor, including amounts owed (30%)
  • A single 30-day late payment on a mortgage can drop a FICO score by 60–110 points, with greater impact on consumers who previously had clean records
  • Late payments are coded by severity: 30 days, 60 days, 90 days, 120 days, and 150+ days — each level inflicts progressively more score damage
  • The American Distress Index tracks payment history degradation across multiple loan types: credit card delinquency at 2.94%, FHA mortgage delinquency at 11.52%, and auto loan delinquency at 5.21%
  • A late payment remains on your credit report for 7 years from the date of the original delinquency, though its score impact diminishes significantly after 2 years

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How Does Payment History Affect Credit Scores?

Scoring models treat payment history as the strongest predictor of future credit behavior. The logic is straightforward: past payment patterns are the best available indicator of whether a borrower will pay as agreed going forward. FICO's research shows that consumers who have never missed a payment default at a fraction of the rate of those with even one late mark.

The severity scale matters enormously:

  • 30-day late: The first reportable delinquency level. A single occurrence can drop a 780 score to approximately 690–720. For someone already at 680, it can push them below the 620 conventional mortgage threshold.
  • 60-day late: More severe than 30-day, indicating a pattern rather than an oversight. Additional score damage beyond the initial drop.
  • 90-day late: A critical threshold — many collection processes begin at 90 days, and lenders view this as a strong predictor of eventual default.
  • 120+ days: Approaching charge-off territory for credit cards (180 days) or serious delinquency for mortgages.

Recency also matters. A late payment from 6 months ago damages your score more than one from 5 years ago, even though both remain on your report. The scoring models give the most weight to recent payment behavior.

What Counts as a Late Payment?

A payment is not reported as late until it is at least 30 days past the due date. Paying on day 29 — while potentially incurring a late fee from the creditor — is not reported to the credit bureaus and has no score impact. This is an important distinction: the late fee is a contractual matter between you and the lender, while the credit reporting is a 30-day threshold.

Not all payments are reported to credit bureaus. Rent, utilities, cell phone bills, and insurance premiums are typically not reported when paid on time — but they may be reported when they go to collections. This creates an asymmetry where missed payments on these accounts can damage your score, but years of on-time payments provide no benefit.

Why Does Payment History Matter for Financial Distress?

Payment history is where individual financial stress becomes statistically visible. Every data point in the American Distress Index's Debt Stress component — credit card delinquency rates, mortgage delinquency rates, auto loan delinquency rates — represents millions of consumers whose payment histories are deteriorating. The 11.52% FHA delinquency rate means roughly 1 in 9 FHA borrowers has at least one missed mortgage payment on their record, a rate 6.5 times higher than conventional borrowers at 1.78%.

This divergence in payment history is not just a scorecard entry — it's a mechanism for compounding distress. As payment histories worsen, credit scores drop, which raises borrowing costs on all future credit, which increases the monthly burden, which makes the next missed payment more likely. This is the distress spiral the ADI is designed to track.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a late payment stay on my credit report?

Late payments remain on your credit report for 7 years from the date of the original delinquency. However, the score impact diminishes over time — most of the recovery happens in the first 2 years, assuming no additional late payments. A single late payment from 5 years ago has relatively little effect on a current score.

Can I get a late payment removed from my credit report?

If the late payment is inaccurate, dispute it with the credit bureau under the FCRA. If it's accurate, you can try a 'goodwill adjustment' — write to the creditor asking them to remove it as a courtesy, especially if it was a one-time occurrence and you have a long payment history. Success varies by creditor.

Does paying a bill 1 day late hurt my credit?

No. A payment is not reported as late until it is 30+ days past due. Being a few days late may trigger a late fee from your creditor, but it will not appear on your credit report or affect your score. The 30-day threshold is the minimum for credit reporting.

Do rent payments count toward payment history?

Traditionally no — most landlords don't report rent payments to credit bureaus. However, services like Experian Boost and rent reporting services (RentTrack, Rental Kharma) can add on-time rent payments to your credit file. Missed rent payments that go to collections will show up regardless.

How does payment history connect to the American Distress Index?

The ADI's Debt Stress component directly measures payment history deterioration across the economy — credit card delinquency, mortgage delinquency, and the FHA/conventional divergence. Rising delinquency rates mean millions of payment histories are worsening simultaneously, which the ADI captures as systemic financial distress.

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