- Accident Sickness and Unemployment Insurance (ASU)
Fairly useless and over-priced insurance which provides cover for missing payments in the circumstances
described, usually after a wait period of around three months. If added to a loan, can increase repayments
significantly. See also Payment Protection Insurance.
- Additional Cardholder
An extra credit card to enable someone else to make purchases on your credit card account, but you
remain fully and solely liable for all spending on both cards.
-
Adjudication
In credit terms this usually refers to the action of a judge making a decision to bankrupt someone,
based on the facts presented to him or her, and coming to the conclusion that the person cannot continue to
pay their debts as they fall due.
- Administration Order
An informal arrangement where a court agrees that a person's debts of up to £5,000 can be paid in part,
and by installments, based on certain conditions. Stays on your credit file for 6 years, alongside all
the loans and credit which were included in the Administration Order.
- Adverse credit
Credit slang for people with a less-than-perfect record of repaying their credit commitments. Can
also refer to late payments, defaults, judgments, repossessions and other 'adverse' items on a
credit file. See also Sub-prime credit.
- Agreement in principle
Credit slang for 'you appear to meet the criteria, but we'll have to check things out'. Not legally
binding, so don't rely on this until you have a full Credit Offer.
- Amortisation
Paying off a debt, over a period of time, by a series of regular repayments.
- Annual Equivalent Rate (AER)
The compound amount of interest you're likely to earn on an investment, or on a savings account, at
current interest rates. This is a marketing trick - it makes the rate look more attractive - and applies
the same principles used in calculating APR on loans, to savings products. Be careful only to compare
AERs with AERs and nothing else.
- Annual Fee
An administration charge levied by a lender - typically by a credit card company. Annual fees occur
typically when a card is not used much.
- Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
This is a rate of interest that lenders are compelled by law to use when advertising credit - it
represents the actual cost of credit including all interest charges and fees, all expressed as one
figure. By requiring lenders to set out the APR in a consistent way, an APR allows you to compare credit
offers on a like for like basis.
- Annuity mortgage
See Capital and Interest Mortgage.
-
Application score
A credit score calculated only on the answers you provide in an application form for credit.
Surprisingly accurate bearing in mind that no credit report information is taken into account.
- Application search
See Search footprint.
- Arrangement fee
An administration charge made by lenders for arranging credit. By law, an arrangement fee must be
quoted in your written offer of credit and in your credit agreement. Not all lenders charge an
arrangement fee.
- Arrangement to pay
A situation where a lender agrees that you can pay less than the repayments legally due, because of a
loss of income or ill health. Arrangements to pay are recorded on credit files and are generally regarded
as bad by other lenders.
- Arrears
If you miss payments on a credit facility, your account is 'in arrears' by the sum you haven't paid.
This can be expressed by amount of the missing payments, or by the number of months' payment you have
missed, such as '£50 in arrears' or '3 months in arrears'.
- Attachment of Earnings Order
A court order served on your employer to deduct an amount of money from your pay and to send it direct
to a lender who has obtained judgment against you. This is one of several remedies after
judgment that a lender can use, once it has obtained judgment against you.
- Bank reference
A carefully coded response given by your bank when someone else asks how good a customer you are.
A typically good response is 'Respectable and trustworthy, considered good for your figure and purpose'.
Omission of words such as 'trustworthy' are important, and small variations have hidden meaning:
- 'considered good' - OK
- 'should prove good' - overstretched but might be OK
- 'we do not feel he would enter into a commitment he could not see his way clear to fulfil' - dodgy.
- Bankruptcy order
A court order which is made following a petition for bankruptcy where it is decided that a person
can no longer pay their debts as they fall due. Once the order is made, the person is 'bankrupt'.
Bankruptcy records remain on your credit file for six years and on land registry files for twelve years,
whether you are discharged or not.
- Base rate
This usually refers to the Interest rate set by the Bank of England. It is more-or-less the interest
rate charged by the Bank of England when it lends money to banks. When you are charged interest by a bank,
a bank will also have its own base rate, which it sets independently of the Bank of England base rate. If
you have an overdraft, you'll often be charged a margin over base rate, such as '7% over base rate',
so if base rate is 6%, you'll be charged (7+6) =13%. You can find the latest Bank of England base rate by
clicking here.
- Bridging Loan
When you buy and sell properties, always sell your existing house first before committing to buy a new
house. If you can't do this, a bank may lend you money to help you to buy the new house, before you have
sold the old one. Effectively the loan 'bridges' the gap. Bridging loans can be either 'closed' - where
the sale of your old house has been legally contracted by exchange of contracts - or 'open ended' where
it has not. For obvious reasons, bridging loans should be avoided as they can be financially crippling,
especially if open ended. Always take professional advice before considering a bridging loan.
- Broker
A middleman who finds a credit facility or mortgage for you and takes a commission, usually from the
lender, for bringing business to its doors. Sometimes called an intermediary.
- Building Society
A financial institution owned by its members rather than by shareholders, set up originally on the
concept that it can enable its members to buy their own homes using other members' deposits.
- Bureau score
A basic credit score provided by a credit reference agency and used mostly by start-up lenders, until
they are in a position to develop a more sophisticated credit scorecard, or by those who are not members
of data sharing clubs such as CAIS, Insight or Share. Some established lenders
use bureau scores to add weight to their own internal risk assessment systems.
- Buy-to-let
A term used to describe a property that has been purchased by a landlord with the intention to let it
out to paying tenants. A 'buy-to-let' mortgage is the loan given to a landlord with the express permission
of the lender that the property can be let out. A buy-to-let mortgage often costs around 1% more than a
standard mortgage.
- CAIS
Stands for Credit Account Information Sharing - Experian's combined database of the payment
history of individuals provided monthly by over 200 lenders to its data sharing club. This
information is shared with your consent, which you normally give when you apply for credit. It is used
primarily for the assessment of credit applications, in particular to help prevent over-indebtedness, for
the prevention and detection of fraud and for the tracing of gone aways.
- Callcredit
UK owned company, part of the Skipton Group. One of the big three credit reference agencies operating
in the UK that collects information about you from several sources and whose principal business is putting
the information together into credit files and then selling them to companies, banks, building
societies, credit card companies, employers, landlords and others.
- Callscore
A bureau score distributed by UK credit reference agency Callcredit.
- Cap
In interest terms, the maximum rate that will be charged.
In flexible loan terms, the maximum amount that can be borrowed at any time (including interest).
- Cap and collar
Used to describe an interest term that cannot exceed the cap, and will not fall lower than the
collar.
- Capital
The original sum of money involved in a financial transaction. When you save money, this is the amount
of your initial investment, or your ongoing investment including interest eaned. When you borrow, this is
the amount of the loan you originally seek from the lender. If interest is added to a credit facility, it
is referred to as being 'capitalised'.
- Capital and Interest Mortgage
A type of mortgage where monthly repayments include capital repayments and interest, so that at the end
of the mortgage term, your mortgage will be repaid in full.
- Capped-rate
An interest rate that cannot exceed a specified limit, irrespective of any fluctuations in the
base rate, for a specified period.
- Card issuer
The bank, building society or store whose name is on your credit card.
- Card Protection
Assistance provided for when you - or your family - lose your credit cards at home or abroad.
A single call triggers off a series of calls to each of your card companies to advise them that
your cards are lost or stolen. Can be expensive if purchased through your credit card company.
- Cash Advance
Using your credit card to get cash either across the counter at bank branches or through cash machines.
Be wary that cash advances are often subject to a handling fee of around 2%.
- CCN
Now called Experian. Stands for 'Credit Control Nottingham'.
- Charge card
A type of credit card where full repayment is automatically required every month, and which do not
carry a credit limit. Diners Card and American Express are issuers of charge cards.
- Charge over Equitable Interest
A mortgage given by one party over a property that is jointly owned. Creditors can sometimes insist
that IVAs are secured using a Charge over the Equitable Interest of the debtor, which means that if the IVA
fails for any reason, then creditors can look to your home for repayment of your debts.
- Charging Order
This is another remedy after judgment which a lender can seek from the Courts once it has judgment.
It effectively places a sort of mortgage on your property at the direction of the court. In fact, it is a
charge over the net sale proceeds, so usually has little impact until you sell your property, when the
amount, plus interest, must then be paid to the lender. It is not possible to remortgage or to obtain a
secured loan when a charging order is in place.
- CIFAS
A trade organisation set up by the
credit industry in 1988 to combat credit fraud, but which has now extended its scope to other areas.
Calling itself 'CIFAS -The UK's Fraud Prevention Service', CIFAS once stood for
'Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance Scheme'. It has 270 members from all walks of life in credit,
including most of the major banks, HP companies, loan providers, credit card issuers,
home loan lenders and telecoms companies. Members share information about suspected fraud to help reduce
fraud risks. A CIFAS entry may appear on a consumer credit report, but these are only a handful of
categories of fraud warnings that lenders (who are members of CIFAS) can access from credit reference agencies.
- CIFAS entry
A CIFAS entry on your credit report is a fraud warning that requires
members of CIFAS to take further checks to validate the details given on any credit application to confirm
your identity. Once your identity is confirmed, the application will be assessed for credit as normal.
Members of CIFAS are not permitted, under the Rules of CIFAS, to decline applications simply on the basis of a CIFAS entry.
CIFAS entries relating to other people, not financially connected to you, may appear on the credit report that lenders see, as
CIFAS warnings include suspected fraudulent applications and suspected exaggerations of application form details from anyone
at your current or previous address. A CIFAS entry may remain on your credit report for a variable
amount of time depending on several factors connected with the actual or attempted fraud.
- CML
Council of Mortgage Lenders - a trade organisation of home finance providers consisting of
specialist mortgage lenders, banks and building societies. Runs the Repossessions Register which appear
on credit reports.
- Collar
Used to describe an interest rate that cannot fall below a specified level over a set period of time.
- Collateral
Americanised term for security.
- Commission
A fee paid by a financial institution to a broker or intermediary in return for referring new business.
- Consolidation Loan
Taking out one big loan to repay a lot of smaller ones. Because the new loan is often repayable
over a longer period, the repayments on the consolidated loan are often a lot less than the sum of all
those relating to the smaller loans. Beware of early repayment penalties when considering a
consolidation loan.
- Consumer Credit Act 1974
The law that gives consumers protection and sets out how credit should be marketed and managed.
- Consumer Credit Trade Association
A trade organisation that looks after the interests of generally smaller consumer lenders.
- Cooling Off Period
A period allowed by law to enable a consumer to cancel an agreement without incurring any penalty.
In credit, the cooling off period is 5 days, though some lenders give more.
- County Court Judgment (CCJ)
The legal acknowledgment that a debt is due. To obtain a CCJ, a lender has first to issue a Notice
of Default, you have to ignore it, the lender must then issue a summons for you to attend court, and
either you fail to turn up at court, or lose the case. A CCJ remains on your credit report for 6 years
irrespective of whether you subsequently pay off the debt.
- Court information
Court information held about you or people who may be assumed to be you is given on public credit
reports and on private credit reports. The most common form of Court Information are
County Court Judgments or CCJs. Where present, these remain on your file for 6 years from the
date of the judgment, whether satisfied or not.
- Credit
The act of someone lending you money now on the basis that you will repay from future income.
- Credit Agreement
A document that sets out the exact terms of credit, in accordance with strict requirements under the
Consumer Credit Act 1974.
- Credit card cheques
A cheque book issued on a credit card account by a fairly small number of card issuers. Often carry
administration fees of around £25 per cheque. Interest can be charged at cash withdrawal rate, so be
careful to check the costs before you use them.
- Credit file
Another term for credit report.
- Credit impaired
Credit slang for someone with defaults, judgments or insolvency recorded on their credit report.
- Credit limit
The maximum amount of credit that a lender will extend to you. Varies from lender to lender. See
overdraft limit.
- Credit search
A check the lender makes with a specialist company to find out whether you have any County Court
Judgments or a record of not paying loans, credit-card bills etc.
- Credit rating
This is a broad classing of credit scores, which in turn determines risk. For consumers, credit
ratings fall into 5 bands, one star to five stars, where one star relates to sub-prime credit customers
and five stars relate to super-accepts and generally undoubted customers. Average risk consumers score
three stars. For companies, credit ratings are given by specialist firms such as Standard and Poors or
Moody, and are expressed in letters. AAA+ is the best corporate rating.
- Credit reference
A general term for a credit report, status report or bank reference.
- Credit report
Comes in two main types - public credit report or private credit report. Your public
credit report usually consists of electoral roll information, insolvency records, judgments and any
notices of correction. Your private credit report consists of your public credit report plus
credit history information obtained from lenders who are members of data sharing clubs. Only
200 or so lenders see your private credit report. Most employers, landlords and others see your much
less detailed public report.
- Credit score
The statistical probability of you defaulting on a credit facility, expressed in a simple number to
help credit underwriters to handle them. In general terms credit scores run between 0 -1000, with 1000
being the best score (the least likely to default). Every credit scorecard is different, as each is
developed specifically for a particular type of lender. What works well for a credit card company might
not work as well for a mobile phone supplier for instance. See also Fair Isaac.
- Data sharing
The sharing of a six year payment history data by around 200-250 UK lenders - so that all lenders
can make a more informed decision and avoid over-indebtedness. There are three main data sharing clubs
- CAIS (hosted by and distributed by Experian), Insight (hosted by and distributed
by Equifax) and Share (hosted by and distributed by Callcredit). The sharing of
data is regulated by a voluntary code known as the Principles of Reciprocity and overseen by a
steering group known as SCOR.
- Deed release fee
One of a number of administration fees charged by mortgage lenders once a mortgage has been repaid to
cover the costs of returning the title deeds to you.
- Default
The event where you fail to respond to a Notice of Default. At this point, you cease being a
customer, and become a debtor.
- Delinquent
Credit slang for a customer not paying on time.
- Delinquent account
Generally a customer with sustained arrears of 2 months or more. Similar to a default,
but a Notice of Default may not have been served on all delinquent accounts.
- Delphi
A bureau score distributed by UK credit reference agency Experian.
- Deposit Account
An account with a bank or building society, which pays a variable rate of interest. You may get a
higher rate of interest if you choose an account which doesn't give you instant access to your money.
- Depreciation
The decrease in value of property (for example, your house) or some other asset (for example, your car)
over a period of time due to natural wear and tear through regular use, or obsolescence.
- Disassociation
Credit slang - the word should correctly be spelt 'dissociation' - referring to the removal of
third party data from a person's credit file at the request of that person.
- Discounted-rate mortgage
A reduction on a mortgage lender's standard variable rate of interest that applies only for a
set period of time. Usually an introductory offer.
- Drawdown loan
Sometimes known as a drawdown facility, a loan which enables you to take out further advances with
very little formality.
- Dynamic delinquency
A method used by scorecard statisticians to chart the expected level of arrears on a chunk of new
customers against actual delinquency, to check that the scorecard is still working properly and that new
customers taken on are in line with the target market of customers.
- Early repayment penalty
A fee you are sometimes required to make to a lender if you pay off a loan or mortgage before the
scheduled term of the credit facility.
- Electoral Roll
The record held by your local authority which records whether you are eligible to vote in various
types of election. Important in credit as the electoral roll (sometimes known as the voters' roll, or
the electoral register), is used as an index for credit files, in the absence of any other national
database of UK residents.
- Endowment mortgage
An interest only mortgage where the capital is expected to be repaid by the proceeds of an
insurance policy on maturity.
- Endowment policy
A type of life insurance cover that pays out in full if you die during the term of the policy, or upon
a set future date. Used in conjunction with endowment mortgages.
- Enquiry
See Search footprint.
- Equity
In mortgage lending, the difference between the value of your property and your current mortgage.
In investment-speak, often refers to stocks and shares.
- Equity Release
Taking a further advance on an existing mortgage to access some of the difference between the value
of your property and your current mortgage.
- Equifax
US owned corporation. One of the big three credit reference agencies operating in the UK that collects
information about you from several sources and whose principal business is putting the information together
into credit files and then selling them to companies, banks, building societies, credit card
companies, employers, landlords and others.
- Experian
UK owned public company. One of the big three credit reference agencies operating in the UK that
collects information about you from several sources and whose principal business is putting the information
together into credit files and then selling them to companies, banks, building societies, credit
card companies, employers, landlords and others.
- Extended Credit Taker
Credit slang for a credit card customer who pays interest on outstanding balances, (and is therefore
very profitable). See also Full payer.
- Fair Isaac
US corporation specialising in developing and selling credit scorecards to banks, credit card companies,
utilities and others worldwide. Fair Isaac, Inc is the largest scorecard company in the World.
In the US, its FICO score is used by all three US credit reference agencies (Experian,
Equifax and TransUnion).
- FICO score
In the US, all three credit reference agencies distribute a standardised credit scoring system known
as FICO scores, developed by Fair Isaac. The higher your FICO, the better. FICO scores also exist in
the UK, but are not distributed by the UK credit reference agencies, who instead distribute their own
bureau scores (known as Callscore, Delphi and Wescore).
- Financial Ombudsman Service
An independent referee who sorts out problems that remain unsolved through normal complaint procedures.
The decision of the Ombudsman is usually binding on the provider of financial services but do not affect
the statutory rights of consumers.
- Financial Services Authority (FSA)
An independent non-governmental body, given statutory powers by the Financial Services and Markets Act
2000 to regulate the financial services industry in the UK. The FSA has been given a wide range of
rule-making, investigatory and enforcement powers.
- First mortgage
Sometimes called first charge. The earliest (in history) mortgage recorded against a property, given
by its current owners. Most high street building societies only accept first mortgages.
- Fixed-rate mortgage
A mortgage where the rate of interest is fixed for a set period.
- Flexible loan
A loan that permits you to increase or decrease the amount borrowed, or to vary the repayments, or
to miss the occasional payment, as set out in the Credit Agreement.
- Fixed Rate
An interest rate which is fixed for a set period.
- Forced sale value (FSV)
Credit slang term for what mortgage lenders expect a property to reach if sold after repossession.
As a rule of thumb, this is around 70% of the market value.
- Full payer
Credit slang for someone who pays their credit card balance in full each month (and is therefore not
very profitable to them). See Extended Credit Taker.
- Further advance
A loan given by a lender in the middle of the term of an existing loan.
- P60
A statement given to you by your employer in April each year showing how much you were paid and
what tax you coughed up on it. Used by underwriters to check that what you said in your application
form is true.
- Payment Holiday
A feature offered by some mortgages that allow you to miss the occasional monthly payments on a
mortgage. Beware - a few lenders record this on your credit report as an arrangement to pay - ask for
clarification on how this will be recorded on your credit report before you take advantage of it.
- Payment Protection Insurance (PPI)
An optional insurance policy made available on credit applications that covers repayments for a limited period if you have an accident, fall sick or become unemployed. Generally giving very poor value for money, best avoided. Opting to take this insurance will not affect your chances of getting credit (by law).
- Pension Mortgage
A type of interest only mortgage where the capital is repaid from the proceeds of a pension.
- Personal Loan
See unsecured loan.
- Plastic
Credit slang for credit card.
- Portable mortgage
A mortgage that can be transferred when you move house, subject to specific conditions set out by a lender.
- Principles of Reciprocity
The rules that govern data sharing of your payment history, overseen by SCOR.
- Proof of income
When mortgage lenders ask for this, it usually means your last 3 months' pay slips, and P60.
Some also ask to see your recent bank statements so they can see the monthly credit to your account.
- Propensity score
A type of credit scorecard that typically predicts your likelihood of using a credit facility
if you are given one. For example, people who use credit cards to borrow money and pay off only
the minimum amount will be very profitable compared to someone who pays off the balance in full every
month, so a propensity scorecard will help determine how profitable a new account might be.
- Protective Registration
A 'Category 0' CIFAS entry is added by a consumer to a credit report when he or she
falls victim to identity fraud. This is a warning to those lenders, who are amongst the 270 members of
CIFAS, to take special care to verify the identity of the applicant.
Any credit application you make cannot be processed automatically. If you have a CIFAS entry on your
credit report, any application for credit that you make will be subjected to delays whilst your identity
is proven.
Category 0 - Protective Registration warnings, together with Category 2 - Victim of Impersonation
warnings, are the only two types of CIFAS entry that are permitted to be visible to consumers on
credit reports. Both of these warnings, plus further categorised warnings relating mostly to suspected
fraudulent attempts from an address (not necessarily from the person being searched) are visible to lenders.
- Public information
In credit report terms, this means the electoral roll, the insolvency registers and court judgment information.
- Schumer box
A prominent box on US credit application forms that shows clearly the costs of credit and in
particular, any fees charged for late payments, bounced cheques, duplicate statements and other aspects.
- SCOR
Stands for Standing Committee on Reciprocity. The informal committee that governs the rules that
surround data sharing, known as the Principles of Reciprocity.
- Searches
There are two basic types of search footprints recorded on your credit report, an application
search and an enquiry. Only application searches are seen by lenders, so that they can make an
assessment of how 'credit active' you are. There are lots of myths about the problems caused by
having several credit application searches recorded on your credit file. Certainly, many searches
within an hour or two can indicate a possible fraud, and dozens in a month can indicate financial
desperation, but up to about 12 searches on file in a year is perfectly normal and is expected.
Very low levels of searches can tell lenders that you are not very credit active, so they may not
be so willing to lend to you.
- Search footprint
Each time someone searches your credit report, a record is left at the credit reference agency
they search. This is called a search footprint. Search footprints include Enquiries, or Application
Searches, depending on whether the search relates to a casual quotation enquiry, or a full blown
credit application. Only Application Searches affect your credit scoring.
- Second mortgage
A mortgage that was given after a first mortgage, and ranks behind the first mortgage in terms of
who gets the money if the property is sold in repossession. Second mortgages tend to be a lot more
expensive than first mortgages to reflect this risk. Consider asking the first mortgage holder
(usually a building society) to give you a (cheaper) further advance before considering a second
mortgage.
- Secured loan
A loan where a lender has the comfort of security to rely upon if you don't keep payments up.
- Security
An asset that you lodge with a lender (see lien) or give a mortgage over, so that if you fail to pay,
the lender can sell to repay the loan.
- Self-certification
A term used in mortgage lenders for the process of not checking income against bank statements or
P60s. See also non-status mortgage.
- Sequestration
Scottish term for an insolvency similar to bankruptcy.
- Set-off
Combine a loan with a credit account to find the net amount owing or due. See Offset mortgage.
- Share
In credit terms, Callcredit's combined database of the payment history of individuals provided
monthly by around 200 lenders to its data sharing club. This information is shared with your consent,
which you normally give when you apply for credit. It is used primarily for the assessment of credit
applications, in particular to help prevent over-indebtedness, for the prevention and detection of
fraud and for the tracing of gone aways.
- Shared equity
A mortgage scheme where the borrower purchases part of a property and the other part is purchased
by a third party, such as a housing association. This differs from shared ownership in that no rent is
paid to the third party for their share. Any future increase in the property value is shared between
both parties in proportion to their share.
- Shared Ownership
A similar mortgage scheme to shared equity, the difference being that the third party receives
monthly rental from the borrower in respect of their share in a property and does not therefore
share in any future increase in the property value.
- Shortfall
Credit slang for any loss between the sale proceeds of a property following repossession, and the
mortgage debt. You are liable for the shortfall for at least six years.
- Standard variable rate
An interest rate set by and charged by each lender, which varies more or less in line with Base Rate.
- Status report
Sometimes known as a status enquiry. A type of bank reference made on a company or partnership.
- Sub prime credit
Industry slang for people with a less-than-perfect record of repaying their credit commitments.
Can also refer to late payments, defaults, judgments, repossessions and other 'adverse' items on a
credit file. See also Adverse credit.
- Subsequent mortgage
A mortgage that is granted after the first mortgage and second mortgage. See Second Mortgage.