There’s a peculiar superstition around credit inquiries. People will refuse to apply for cards they want, decline to shop mortgage rates, or panic about a pre-approval check, all because they’ve absorbed the idea that hard pulls are catastrophic for their credit score. The reality is much milder, and the anxiety often costs more than the inquiries ever could.
Inquiry-aversion is one of the most expensive myths in personal finance. The actual mechanics are designed to be barely noticeable.
What a hard pull actually does
A single hard inquiry typically drops a FICO score by zero to five points, with most consumers landing in the two-to-four-point range. The effect fades within months, and inquiries fall off your report entirely after two years. They stop affecting your score after one. For a score in the 750s, a five-point dip is essentially invisible to lenders, who categorize scores in ranges of 20 to 30 points.
Compare that to the supposed cost of avoiding inquiries: not shopping mortgage rates can cost tens of thousands over the life of a loan; not applying for a sign-up bonus card can leave hundreds of dollars on the table; not asking for a credit limit increase can keep utilization artificially high, which actually does meaningfully hurt your score. The math isn’t close.
The shopping window for big loans
FICO and VantageScore both treat multiple inquiries for the same type of loan within a short window as a single inquiry. For mortgages, auto loans, and student loans, that window ranges from 14 to 45 days depending on the scoring model. Shopping five lenders for a mortgage in two weeks counts as one inquiry, not five.
This is the most underused feature of credit scoring. People who think they can only apply to one mortgage lender because of inquiry concerns are leaving rate negotiation on the table. The system explicitly accommodates rate-shopping; it’s the credit card and personal loan inquiries that count separately, and even those barely move the needle.
What actually moves your score
Payment history (35%) and credit utilization (30%) make up roughly two-thirds of your FICO score. Length of credit history, credit mix, and new credit (which includes inquiries) make up the rest combined. New credit is the smallest weighted factor, around 10%, and inquiries are only a portion of that.
Meanwhile, a single 30-day late payment can drop your score 60 to 110 points and stays on your report for seven years. Maxing out a credit card can drop you 30 to 50 points until you pay it down. Closing your oldest account can permanently shorten your credit history. These are the things that actually matter, and they’re the things people tend to ignore while obsessing over inquiry counts.
The bottom line
Credit inquiries are real but minor. The idea that you should avoid applying for credit you’d benefit from, or skip rate-shopping a mortgage to “protect” your score, gets the cost-benefit exactly backwards. Watch your payments and utilization. Inquiries will sort themselves out, and the marginal hit is almost always smaller than what you gain by acting.
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