Your credit scores are built from multiple factors, but one carries more weight than any other: your payment history. Under VantageScore 3.0, the model ScoreSense displays, payment history accounts for roughly 40% of your score. Under FICO, it sits at 35%. Either way, no other input matters more.
That weight exists because the credit bureaus treat your past behavior with credit as the strongest available signal of how you'll handle credit going forward.
Your payment history is the record of how consistently you've paid your credit obligations on time. It tracks every account that reports to the credit bureaus, month by month, across years. Paying bills by the due date is reflected as positive payment activity on your credit reports
Paying bills by the due date is reflected as positive payment activity on your credit reports. Miss a payment, or pay it well after the due date, and that record takes a hit.
A single late payment may only nudge your credit scores. Repeated or habitual late payments compound, and the effect grows the longer an account stays delinquent. Credit profiles with higher scores commonly show the same underlying habit: consistent on-time payments, every cycle, across every open account.
The two scoring models most lenders use weigh payment history slightly differently, but both rank it as the single largest factor.
VantageScore 3.0 weighs its six factors approximately as follows:
FICO weighs payment history at 35% of its score, followed by amounts owed (30%), length of credit history (15%), credit mix (10%), and new credit (10%).
The takeaway is the same in either model. Payment history is the heaviest variable. Because it carries significant weight, changes in payment history may influence your credit scores.
Lenders, landlords, and insurers look at payment history because it answers the question they actually care about: does this person pay what they owe, on time?
Credit scoring models translate that question into math. They count how many of your accounts have ever been late, how late those payments were, how recently those late payments occurred, and how many accounts are currently in good standing. The output, expressed as your credit score, is the model's best estimate of how likely you are to repay future credit on time.
That is why payment history is treated as a measure of creditworthiness. Every other factor (utilization, account age, credit mix) speaks to your borrowing capacity or experience. Only payment history speaks directly to your follow-through.
Your credit reports include payment activity for most credit-based accounts, including:
Some payment activity does not consistently appear on your credit reports. Rent, utilities, and cell phone bills typically only show up if the landlord, utility, or carrier reports them, or if a missed payment is sent to collections.
The credit bureaus build your payment history from data your creditors report, usually once per billing cycle. A payment that is a few days late often does not get reported as late at all. The reporting thresholds matter:
Once a late payment is reported, several factors influence how much it affects your credit:
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau publishes consumer-facing guidance on how late payments are reported and how long they remain on your credit reports.
Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, most negative payment information can remain on your credit reports for up to seven years from the date of the original delinquency. That includes 30, 60, 90, and 120-plus day lates, as well as charge-offs and most collections.
A few important nuances:
If you find a late payment on your credit reports that should not be there, you have the right to dispute it directly with the bureau. The ScoreSense Dispute Center provides step-by-step guidance to help members file disputes themselves with Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion.
You cannot rewrite past late payments, Future payment activity will continue to be reflected in your credit reports over time. A few habits do most of the work.
These steps support credit health strategies broadly. They are not a guarantee that any specific score change will follow, since credit scoring models weigh many variables.
ScoreSense provides daily credit monitoring through Experian, with monthly score updates from all three bureaus that members pull when they sign in. Identity theft monitoring and up to $1 million identity theft insurance policy underwritten by AIG are available as upgrades to the membership.
Under VantageScore 3.0, the model ScoreSense displays, payment history accounts for approximately 40% of the score. Under FICO, it accounts for 35%. The exact percentage depends on which model is being used, but in every major consumer credit scoring model, payment history is the largest single factor.
A reported late payment can remain on your credit reports for up to seven years from the date of the original delinquency, per the Fair Credit Reporting Act. The score impact tends to fade over time, particularly as the late payment ages and as you build a record of on-time payments after it.
Not automatically. Paying off a collection account typically updates the status to "paid" but does not remove the account from your reports. The collection can stay on your reports for up to seven years from the original delinquency date that triggered the collection. Some newer scoring models weigh paid collections less heavily than unpaid ones. If you believe a collection is reporting in error, the ScoreSense Dispute Center walks you through filing a dispute with the bureau.
It can produce a score change, but the direction and size depend on the specifics. Paying off a credit card balance typically reduces utilization, which may positively affect your score. Paying off a collection or charge-off updates the status of the account but does not erase it. The exact score change varies by individual and by scoring model. ScoreSense's ScoreCast provides estimates of how certain actions may be reflected in score changes.
A consistent record of on-time payments across all your active accounts, with no late payments in recent months and ideally no late payments in the past two years, is generally considered strong. Members with credit scores of 810 or above, the threshold for excellent credit on most VantageScore models, almost universally show clean recent payment history.
Rent and utilities are not automatically included in your payment history. Some landlords and utility companies report through third-party services, and several consumer-facing services let renters opt into reporting their on-time rent payments. Check with your landlord or utility provider to see whether they participate, and verify which bureaus the reporting service shares data with. You can also see whether those payments are showing up on your reports by reviewing all three bureau reports inside ScoreSense.