How Credit Utilization Affects Your Score (and What It Should Be)

Credit utilization makes up 30% of your FICO score. Learn what it is, the ideal percentage, and how to lower it fast for maximum score impact.

By Score Pros Team Updated April 09, 2026 6 min read

The Second-Biggest Factor in Your Score

Credit utilization is the percentage of your total available credit that you're currently using. It accounts for 30% of your FICO score — second only to payment history. And unlike payment history, you can change it immediately.

The formula is simple: total balances ÷ total credit limits = utilization ratio. If you have $3,000 in balances across cards with $10,000 in total limits, your utilization is 30%.

What's the Ideal Utilization?

Below 30% is the standard advice. But if you want to maximize your score, aim lower:

Below 10% is where scores really take off. People with 800+ FICO scores typically have utilization in the 1-7% range.

1-3% is the sweet spot. Having a tiny balance (not zero) that you pay in full each month shows activity while keeping utilization minimal.

0% can actually be worse than 1-3%. Some scoring models interpret zero utilization as inactivity. A small balance shows you're actively using and managing credit.

This applies both to individual cards AND overall. Having one maxed card at 95% utilization drags your score even if your overall ratio is 20%.

How to Lower Utilization Fast

Pay down before the statement date. Your balance is typically reported to bureaus when your statement generates — not when you make a payment. If you pay down before the statement close, the lower balance is what gets reported.

Request limit increases. If your $5,000 limit becomes $10,000, your utilization drops from 30% to 15% without paying a dollar. This is the trick from our 100-point playbook.

Spread balances across multiple cards. Two cards at 25% utilization each is better than one card at 50% and one at 0%. Per-card utilization matters.

Don't close old cards. Closing a card removes that limit from your total available credit, instantly raising your utilization percentage.

The AZEO Method

AZEO stands for All Zero Except One. Before your statements close, pay all cards to zero except one, which you leave with a small balance ($5-50). This produces the lowest possible utilization while still showing activity.

This is a scoring optimization technique, not a lifestyle recommendation. Use it strategically when you know your score is about to be pulled — like 30-45 days before a mortgage application.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is credit utilization ratio?
It's the percentage of your available credit you're using. Total balances divided by total credit limits. It makes up 30% of your FICO score.
What's the ideal utilization percentage?
Below 30% is good. Below 10% is better. 1-3% is optimal. People with 800+ scores typically use 1-7% of their available credit.
Does utilization matter per card or just overall?
Both. Your overall utilization across all cards matters, AND the utilization on each individual card matters. One maxed card hurts even if your overall ratio is low.
How do I lower utilization quickly?
Pay down balances before your statement closing date, request credit limit increases, and spread balances across multiple cards. Don't close unused cards.
Does a zero balance hurt your score?
It can. Some scoring models treat zero utilization as inactivity. Keeping a small balance (1-3% of limit) that you pay in full each month is optimal.
What is the AZEO method?
All Zero Except One — pay all cards to zero except one with a small balance before statements close. This minimizes utilization while showing activity.
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