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Average FICO Score Drops Again For New-Car Loan Approvals

By Liz Opsitnik
Friday, Apr 17 2009 09:46

It looks as if banks are lowering their standards for approving consumers for a car loan, at least a little. In March, the average FICO score for new-car buyers, 722, hit its lowest level since May 2006, according to CNW Research.

In November 2005, the average FICO score for financing a new-car buyer was 681, which was the lowest level recorded.

FICO score

Even though consumers try to get their FICO score as high as possible, lenders seem to be easing car loan approval restrictions a bit to get more people approved.

The 722 average FICO score for March includes buyers who took out a car loan, lease and paid cash. It excludes commercial fleets used 80 percent or more for business.

As banks and lenders keep lowering the average FICO score required to get an auto loan, more buyers who need a car but don’t have perfect credit will be able to get approved for the car loans and leases they need.

 

Image via ftccreditrepair.com.

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Confused or unsure about some of the car loan terms used in the article? Click here for our Auto Loan Glossary.



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Comment By: Tee Boone on Tue, Jul 14 2009 at 4:50 PM
If 722 was average in March, there must have been like, 5 buyers, because GM and Chrysler are bankrupt, and the Japs aren't doing any better. Mitsubishi is tanking faster than the Jap Zeros they built in WW2, and they are about to go bankrupt too. 722 is a pipe dream. With 7 MILLION houses on the verge of foreclosure, the average FICO score is probably closer to 600, but NOBODY wants to let the average American find out, because then they would demand better credit terms. Mushroom management; keep em' in the dark and feed them sh*t!!!!

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