What is considered a bad credit score?

Key Takeaways

  • A FICO score below 580 or a VantageScore of less than 601 is considered a bad credit score.

  • If your score falls in the bad credit range, you will face less favorable outcomes with lenders (who may charge you higher interest rates), landlords (who could deny you housing) and possibly prospective employers (who might reject you for a job).

  • You can improve your score in various ways, such as making on-time payments and becoming an authorized user on the credit card account of a friend or family member with good credit habits.

Whether you’re applying for a personal loan or taking out a mortgage, having bad credit makes many everyday financial activities more complicated. Those with bad credit might find it harder to qualify for a credit card or get stuck with lower credit limits and higher interest rates if they are approved — something that could quickly make life unaffordable if they have to carry a balance from month to month. It can even prevent you from getting a new job.

A FICO score below 580 is considered a bad credit score, meaning it falls in the poor credit range. Along the same lines, a bad score using the VantageScore model is below 601 — which would belong in the poor or very poor credit ranges. Lenders often refer to scores in these ranges as “subprime,”

Here, we’ll break down what it means to have a bad credit score as well as the impact it could have on your life and what you can do to fix it.

What is a bad credit score?

There are two widely used credit score types: FICO and VantageScore. While both scoring models use a credit spectrum ranging from 300 to 850, their credit scoring ranges differ.

What is a bad FICO credit score?

In the FICO (Fair Isaac Corporation) scoring model, scores range from 300 to 850. This number is designed to signal to potential lenders how risky a particular borrower is. If your credit score lands in the range of 300 and 579, it is considered poor, and lenders are more likely to see you as a risk.

Here’s how the FICO credit scoring system ranks credit scores:

FICO credit scores

  • Poor: 300-579

  • Fair: 580-669

  • Good: 670-739

  • Very Good: 740-799

  • Exceptional: 800-850

In October 2024, the average FICO credit score in the U.S. was 717 points, which is squarely in the good range. If your credit score is less than 670, it falls in either the fair or poor range — which is considered below average and may be considered subprime by lenders.

What is a bad VantageScore credit score?

VantageScore is another credit scoring model that pulls data from consumer credit reports to calculate a credit score. In the VantageScore model, a score between 300 and 660 is considered a subprime credit score, with scores below 500 deemed very poor.