A kid needs emergency dental surgery costing $3,500. If they have a 720 credit score and one credit card with a $2,000 limit. Which would hurt their score the least
a. Open a medical credit card (like CareCredit) with 0% interest for 12 months.
b. Max out their current credit card.
c. Take out a small personal loan from a credit union.
c. Take out a small personal loan from a credit union.
A 19 year old foster youth finds an apartment for $1100/month. The landlord requires a $1100 security deposit. Their credit score is 710. They have a credit card with a $1000 limit and $0 balance. They have $800 in savings Which option would hurt their credit the least
a. Put $1000 on the credit card to cover most of the deposit and pay it off slowly
b. Use the $800 savings and ask the landlord if they can split the remaining $300 into next months rent
c. Open two new credit cards to increase total available credit quickly
b. Use the $800 savings and ask the landlord if they can split the remaining $300 into next months rent
You live somewhere with limited public transportation. A better job opportunity is in a nearby city with strong bus/train access. If you’re focused on long-term financial stability, what would you do?
Option 1: Stay, finance a car
Option 2: Move, use public transit, no car payment
a. Stay and finance a car immediately
b. Move where transportation costs are lower and build credit gradually
c. Finance the car without reading terms
d. Wait without making a plan
b. Move where transportation costs are lower and build credit gradually
You are driving to buy groceries when your check engine light flashes and the car starts smoking. A mechanic tells you it’s a $1,200 repair. You have a 610 credit score and a credit card with a $1000 limit that currently has a $200 balance on it. You need the car to get to work tomorrow. How do you pay the mechanic?
a. Put the whole $800 on the Credit Card. You plan to pay off the $800 slowly over the next year
b. Take a payday loan.
c. You pay $400 in cash from your savings and $400 on the credit card. You vow to pay that $400 off within two months
You pay $400 in cash from your savings and $400 on the credit card. You vow to pay that $400 off within two months
What is the credit number range?
300-850
An 18-year-old former foster youth goes to the ER for a serious asthma attack. They receive a $2,800 medical bill. They don’t have insurance and only have $900 in savings. They have a credit card with a $1,000 limit.
Call the hospital billing department, ask for financial assistance, and request a payment plan before paying anything; hospital sometimes offer discounts
An 18 year old has a 575 credit score. They are denied two apartments because of poor credit. They want to move out within 6 months. What strategy helps the most
a. Open a secured credit card, keep balance under 30% and make every payment on time
b. Apply to five more apartments immediately
c. Max out credit card to show they can handle debt
a. Open a secured credit card, keep balance under 30% and make every payment on time
You just started a job. You can either:
Option 1: Buy a used car with a $400/month payment
Option 2: Take public transportation for $100/month and save the difference
You want to build credit safely and avoid financial stress.
What would you do?
A. Buy the car immediately so you can build credit faster
B. Use public transportation, save money, and build credit with a small credit card
C. Take the car loan even if it stretches your budget
D. Ignore credit for now
B. Use public transportation, save money, and build credit with a small credit card
You are moving from a transitional housing program into your first apartment. To finish your errand, you need to set up electricity and Wi-Fi. When you call the utility company, they say: “Since you have no credit history, you must pay a $400 security deposit today, or find someone to sign for you. You only have $500 left for the whole month for food and bus passes. How do you handle this?
a. The Wi-Fi company offers a store credit card. If you sign up, they waive the $400 deposit and give you the first month free
b. You spend the afternoon calling your former foster agency or a local non profit. You ask them to provide a document saying they will cover the bill if you don’t, which will take 3 extra days
c. Your new roommate offers to put the utilities in their name if you just give them $50 cash toward the deposit
b. You spend the afternoon calling your former foster agency or a local non profit. You ask them to provide a document saying they will cover the bill if you don’t, which will take 3 extra days
What affects you credit score the most?
Payment affects you score contributing 35% to your score.
You ignore a $1,500 medical bill for 45 days because you're overwhelmed. It goes to collections. Why does this drop your score more than maxing out a credit card would?
Collections hurts more than maxing card.
Collections = severe derogatory mark
Jack has been paying $900 rent on time for a year. Their credit score hasn’t improved.Why might that be?
a. Most landlords don't automatically report rent payments
b. Rent never effects credit at all
c. They need to carry a credit card balance for rent to count
a. Most landlords don't automatically report rent payments
Your car repair costs $1,200. Which is riskier long-term: payday loan at 400% APR, or maxing out your card to cover it? Explain.
Payday loan is worse
A store offers 20% off if you open a card. You save $50 instantly. Why might that short-term win create long-term risk?
Short-term savings, long-term score risk
How can this credit system be unfair?
One missed payment can drop your score 50+ points
You keep utilization under 10% all year, but miss one payment by 31 days. Your friend maxes out their card but never misses a payment. Whose score likely drops more and why?
Missed payment causes larger drop
A landlord requires 2x deposit due to your credit. Which behaviors over the past year most likely triggered that requirement? Think beyond just “low score.”
2x deposit likely due to low score + risk profile
Your balance is $200 on a $1,000 limit. You add $800. What is your new utilization, and what scoring range does that put you in?
$800 + $200 balance on $1000 limit = 100% utilization
You use Buy Now Pay Later for $180 sneakers. You miss one payment by 35 days. Why can this damage your score as much as missing a credit card payment?
Missed BNPL payment can report as delinquency
True or False: Opening 3 credit cards at once improves you score because your total limit increases.
False, it looks risky as opening up many card look like someone is over-spending
RISK QUESTION: You charge $2,500 on a $3,000 card during an emergency. Two weeks later, a landlord runs a credit check. Calculate your utilization and explain how that timing affects approval odds.
Utilization ≈ 83% ($2500/$3000) – very high; approval risk increases
RISK QUESTION: You have a $500 limit. You carry $200 balance. You need to apply for housing in 2 months. What exact balance should you aim for before the credit check — and why that specific number?
Reduce balance under 30% ($150 on $500 limit) before application
RISK QUESTION: You can move closer to transit for a better job OR finance a car immediately to expand work options. Both increase income. Which path is more likely to strengthen credit over 12 months — and under what conditions would the other be smarter?
Move near transit if it reduces debt load and keeps utilization low
Two people have identical incomes. One overspends $50 weekly and uses credit to cover gaps. The other budgets tightly and never crosses 30% utilization. After one year, how different are their approval odds — and why?
After 1 year, disciplined user has much stronger approval odds
What is the best first step for a foster youth who does not have a credit co-signer. Explain why.
a. secured card
b. authorized user
c. starter credit card
d. credit-builder loan
The secured card is the best first step. It is controlled, low risk, builds payment history.