A simple phone call to a credit-card company could help struggling borrowers improve their credit score. Requesting a credit-limit increase might make a strained financial profile look stronger on paper. But experts urge borrowers to proceed with caution before making the request.
The strategy works because credit scoring models consider credit utilization ratios. This ratio measures how much available credit a person uses compared to their total credit limit. A lower ratio generally signals responsible borrowing and boosts credit scores.
A higher credit limit automatically lowers the utilization rate if spending stays the same. For example, someone with a $2,000 limit and a $1,000 balance uses 50% of available credit. Increasing the limit to $4,000 drops that ratio to 25% without any change in debt.
Credit-card companies may approve limit increases based on income, payment history, and account age. Some issuers allow customers to request an increase online or over the phone without a hard credit pull. A soft inquiry does not affect credit scores, but a hard inquiry can temporarily lower them.
Proceeding without caution carries risks for some borrowers. A higher limit can tempt overspending, leading to more debt and potential missed payments. Late payments and high balances would hurt credit scores more than a low limit ever did.
Issuers may also deny requests if recent income or employment changes create red flags. A denied request can sometimes trigger a hard inquiry even when one was not expected. Borrowers should ask specifically whether a request will involve a hard or soft pull.
For those with steady income and controlled spending habits, a limit increase can be a safe tool. It offers a quick way to improve credit scores without changing existing debt levels. The key is to treat the extra credit as an emergency buffer, not new spending power.





