Minimum credit scores: Conventional 620, FHA 580, VA none. See how your score affects rates and quick tips to boost it before applying. Get your quote.
Your credit score determines two things when you refinance: whether you get approved, and what interest rate you pay.
A 40-point difference in credit score can cost you $100/month on a $350,000 loan.
In my 15 years as a California mortgage broker, I've seen people get denied with a 615 score when they were one month away from hitting 620. I've also seen borrowers improve their score 60 points in 90 days and save $150/month.
Your credit score is the single biggest factor in your refinance rate—bigger than loan size, bigger than LTV, bigger than anything except the Federal Reserve.
Here's exactly what score you need, how your score affects your rate, and how to boost your score fast.
Different loan programs have different credit requirements:
Standard requirement: 620 FICO score
Ideal score: 680+ (significantly better rates)
Best rates: 740+
Some lenders will go down to 600-620 if you have compensating factors (low LTV, low DTI, lots of cash reserves). But these are portfolio lenders charging higher rates.
Broker's Tip: If your score is 615-619, wait one month. Pay down your credit cards, dispute any errors, and reapply when you hit 620. The difference between "denied" and "approved" is often 5 points.
Standard requirement: 580 FICO score
Better approval odds: 620+
Ideal score: 640+
FHA is more lenient than conventional, but you'll pay mortgage insurance (MIP) for the life of the loan—which adds $200-$400/month to your payment.
If your score is 620+, go conventional. You'll get better rates and no permanent mortgage insurance.
Read more: FHA Streamline Refinance: Rates, Requirements & How to Apply.
VA guidelines: No minimum credit score required
Lender overlays: Most require 620+
Ideal score: 640+
The VA doesn't set a minimum score, but individual lenders do. Most VA lenders want at least 620. Some will go to 580-600 for veterans with strong compensating factors.
VA IRRRL streamline refinances are more lenient because they don't require income verification or appraisal. If you're struggling to qualify for a standard VA refinance, try the IRRRL.
Read more: VA IRRRL Streamline Refinance: The Complete 2026 Guide.
Standard requirement: 640 FICO score
USDA loans are for rural properties. If you currently have a USDA loan, you can do a USDA Streamline refinance with more lenient credit requirements (sometimes down to 600).
Here's what you'll actually pay based on your credit score as of March 2026:
30-year fixed refinance rates:
| Credit Score | Rate | Monthly Payment (on $350k) | Total Interest (30 years) | |--------------|------|---------------------------|---------------------------| | 760+ | 6.34% | $2,183 | $435,800 | | 740-759 | 6.50% | $2,212 | $446,320 | | 700-739 | 6.60% | $2,241 | $456,760 | | 680-699 | 6.875% | $2,302 | $478,720 | | 660-679 | 7.125% | $2,364 | $500,040 | | 640-659 | 7.50% | $2,447 | $530,920 | | 620-639 | 7.875% | $2,533 | $562,880 |
Look at the difference between 760 and 640:
This is why I tell clients: if your score is 720, spend 2 months getting it to 740. You'll save $3,600/year.
Broker's Tip: Lenders use your middle score from all three bureaus. If your scores are 720 (Experian), 695 (TransUnion), and 710 (Equifax), they use 710. If two scores are the same, they use that score.
Most people don't know their real FICO score. Here's how to find it:
1. AnnualCreditReport.com (official government site)
2. Your Credit Card Company
3. Credit Karma
4. MyFICO.com
Broker's Tip: Don't rely on Credit Karma's score when deciding whether to apply. It's often 20 points higher than your mortgage FICO score. Use your credit card's FICO score or pay for a MyFICO report.
Mortgage lenders pull FICO scores from all three credit bureaus:
These are older FICO models. Your auto loan FICO or credit card FICO might be different.
They take the middle score. If your three scores are 680, 695, and 710, they use 695.
Your FICO score is based on five factors:
What it is: Have you paid your bills on time?
Impact: One 30-day late payment can drop your score 60-100 points.
How to improve it:
Broker's Tip: If you have a recent late payment, write a letter of explanation for your lender. Sometimes underwriters will overlook a single 30-day late if you have a valid reason (medical emergency, job loss, etc.).
What it is: How much of your available credit are you using?
Formula: Total balances ÷ Total credit limits
Ideal utilization: Under 30% (under 10% is even better)
Example:
If you're at 50%+ utilization, your score is getting hammered.
How to improve it fast:
Broker's Tip: This is the fastest way to boost your score. Pay down $5,000 in credit card debt and your score can jump 40-60 points in 30 days.
What it is: How long you've had credit accounts open
Impact: Longer history = better score
Average account age matters. If you have:
Your average age is 8.3 years.
How to improve it:
What NOT to do: Close old credit cards before refinancing. It tanks your average account age.
What it is: Do you have a variety of credit types (credit cards, car loans, mortgage, student loans)?
Impact: Having both revolving credit (credit cards) and installment loans (auto, mortgage) is better than only having one type.
How to improve it: Don't stress this. It's only 10%. Don't take out a car loan just to improve your credit mix.
What it is: How many new accounts have you opened? How many hard credit pulls have you had?
Impact: Opening 3 new credit cards in a month tanks your score. A single hard inquiry drops it 5-10 points.
Mortgage shopping exception: Multiple mortgage inquiries within a 45-day window count as a single inquiry. Shop as many lenders as you want in that timeframe.
How to improve it:
If your score is 660 and you need 680, here's the playbook:
Get your reports: AnnualCreditReport.com
Look for:
Dispute errors: File disputes online with each bureau. They have 30 days to investigate.
Common errors:
Potential score boost: 10-40 points
Goal: Get under 30% utilization on each card (under 10% is ideal)
Strategy:
Potential score boost: 40-80 points (this is the biggest lever)
How: Call or log into each credit card account and request a limit increase.
Why it works: Increases your total available credit → lowers utilization → boosts score
Example:
Potential score boost: 10-30 points
Warning: Some issuers do a hard pull for limit increases (which temporarily dings your score). Ask first: "Will this be a hard or soft inquiry?"
Do:
Don't:
Score improvement timeline: Most changes show up on your credit report within 30 days (next billing cycle).
How it works: Ask a family member with excellent credit and a long credit history to add you as an authorized user on their oldest credit card.
Their account (and its perfect payment history) will show up on your credit report. Instant boost.
Potential score boost: 20-50 points
Warning: If they miss a payment or max out the card, it hurts your score too. Only do this with someone financially responsible.
Chapter 7: You can refinance 4 years after discharge (2 years with FHA/VA and extenuating circumstances)
Chapter 13: You can refinance 2 years after discharge with on-time payments (1 year with FHA/VA and extenuating circumstances)
What to do: Focus on rebuilding credit during the waiting period. Get a secured credit card, pay everything on time, keep balances low.
Conventional: 7 years waiting period
FHA/VA: 3 years with extenuating circumstances
What to do: Similar to bankruptcy—rebuild credit, document any extenuating circumstances (job loss, medical emergency, divorce).
Under $2,000 total: Most lenders ignore them
Over $2,000: You might need to pay them off or set up a payment plan before closing
Medical collections under $500: Ignored by most lenders
Broker's Tip: Don't pay off old collections right before applying. It can actually lower your score temporarily (the account gets updated as "recently active"). Pay them during the loan process if the lender requires it.
Credit score requirements are the same, but lenders scrutinize your income more heavily.
You'll need:
Mistake #1: Opening a new credit card during the refinance process. Even if you're approved, the lender re-pulls your credit right before closing. New credit = denied at the last minute.
Mistake #2: Paying off all your credit cards and closing them. Closing accounts lowers your available credit → raises utilization → drops score. Pay them down, keep them open.
Mistake #3: Ignoring small errors on your credit report. A single incorrect late payment can cost you 0.25%-0.50% on your rate. That's $50-$100/month.
Mistake #4: Assuming Credit Karma is accurate. It's often 20-30 points higher than your mortgage FICO. Use your credit card's FICO score or buy a MyFICO report.
Mistake #5: Co-signing a loan for a family member right before refinancing. Co-signed debt counts against your DTI. If it pushes you over 50% DTI, you're denied.
Option 1: Wait and improve it. If you're at 610 and need 620, spend 60-90 days paying down debt and disputing errors.
Option 2: Add a co-borrower. If your spouse or partner has better credit, add them to the application. Lenders use the lowest middle score of all borrowers, but a second income can offset a lower score.
Option 3: Try FHA. FHA allows scores as low as 580. You'll pay mortgage insurance, but you can refinance later to conventional once your score improves.
Option 4: Use a non-QM lender. These are portfolio lenders that don't follow Fannie/Freddie rules. They'll approve scores as low as 500-550, but you'll pay 8%-10% interest. Only use this as a last resort.
Broker's Tip: I've never recommended Option 4 to a client. The rates are predatory. It's better to spend 6 months fixing your credit and getting a conventional loan at 6.5%.
If your credit score is 620+, you're good to go. If it's 680+, you'll get competitive rates. If it's 740+, you'll get the absolute best rates available.
Step 1: Check your credit score using your credit card's app or MyFICO.com.
Step 2: If your score is under 680, spend 30-60 days paying down credit cards and disputing errors.
Step 3: Shop at least 3 lenders to compare rates based on your actual credit score.
Step 4: Lock your rate and proceed with the refinance.
Want a broker to shop lenders for you? Get your free quote at refinancerate.com — we work with 20+ lenders, including some that specialize in lower credit scores. We'll find you the best rate for your situation.
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Licensed mortgage broker with 15+ years of experience helping homeowners save money through refinancing. CA DRE #01212512.