What this guide covers
Three UK credit reference agencies — Experian, Equifax, TransUnion — collect data about your bills, loans and addresses. Lenders use their reports to decide who to lend to and at what rate. Build a thin file with a credit-builder card from age 18, pay it off in full every month, and never miss a bill. That's 80% of the game.
What a credit score actually is
There's no single "UK credit score" — there are three, one from each major credit reference agency (CRA). Each CRA collects slightly different data and uses a different scale, so you can have a "fair" score with one and a "good" with another.
| Agency | Scale | "Good" | "Excellent" | Free check? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experian | 0-999 | 881-960 | 961-999 | Yes (Experian Free) |
| Equifax | 0-1000 | 531-670 | 811-1000 | Yes (ClearScore) |
| TransUnion | 0-710 | 604-627 | 628-710 | Yes (Credit Karma) |
The exact number matters less than the range. Most lenders just want to know whether you're "good" or better — they're not comparing 881 vs 920.
What's in your credit report
Five categories of data, weighted roughly like this:
- Payment history (35% influence). Have you paid bills, loans and cards on time, every time, for the past 6 years?
- Amounts owed / utilisation (30%). If you have a £1,000 credit card limit and your balance is £950, that's 95% utilisation — looks risky. Keep it under 30%.
- Length of credit history (15%). How long your oldest active credit account has been open. Closing your oldest card to "tidy up" usually hurts your score.
- Credit mix (10%). A mix of credit card + phone contract + loan looks better than three credit cards. But don't take loans you don't need.
- New credit (10%). Applying for too much credit in a short window (more than 1-2 applications in 6 months) reads as financial stress.
How to start a credit file from scratch at 18
If you're 18 and have never had a credit product, you have a "thin file". Most lenders will refuse you because they can't see how you behave. The fastest legal way to build a file:
- Get on the electoral register at your home address. This is free, takes 5 minutes online, and is the single biggest single uplift to a thin file.
- Open a current account in your own name. Switch any direct debits into it (phone bill, gym, streaming) so the account shows activity.
- Apply for a credit-builder credit card (Aqua, Capital One Classic, Vanquis are common). Limits start at £200-500. APR is high (29-40%), but if you pay in full every month you never pay any interest.
- Use it for one small thing a month — your phone bill, or a tank of petrol, or a single grocery shop. Pay it off in full by direct debit.
- Wait 6-12 months. Your file matures. Your score improves. You become "lendable".
What WILL hurt your score
- Missing a phone bill, gym membership or rent payment for 1+ month. Even £10 unpaid for 60 days can knock you back a year.
- Going over your credit card limit, even by £1.
- Applying for 5 credit cards in 3 months "to see which accepts me."
- Defaulting on a loan or being made bankrupt (stays on file for 6 years).
- Closing your oldest credit account.
- Having a CCJ (county court judgement) registered against you — visible for 6 years.
- Letting "buy now pay later" balances run into late-pay status. From 2026, BNPL is being added to credit reports.
Free tools and what to check every 3 months
Check your credit report at least every 3 months — it's free, and helps you spot identity theft early.
- Experian Free — credit-experian.co.uk
- ClearScore (Equifax) — clearscore.com
- Credit Karma (TransUnion) — creditkarma.co.uk
- Statutory credit reports — each agency must give you one free statutory report by law. Slow but most complete.
Things to check every time:
- Are you on the electoral roll at your current address?
- Are all the accounts listed actually yours? (If you spot one you don't recognise — investigate immediately.)
- Any payments marked as "late" or "missed" you don't remember? Disputes are free, by email.
- Any old addresses you don't live at any more? Remove them.
National Curriculum links
- England — PSHE Association KS4 L19 (income, debt, financial products)
- England — PSHE Association KS4 L20 (fraud awareness)
- England — Citizenship KS4 (operation of the economy, consumer rights)
- England — Computing KS4 (online identity, data protection)
- Wales — Curriculum for Wales Progression Step 5 (HWB, Science & Technology AoLE)
- Scotland — Curriculum for Excellence HWB 4-21a
- NI — LLW KS4 Personal Finance
Full mapping in the curriculum map.
UK Tax Drag (2026). Credit score explained — how to build one safely from age 18. Ages 16–18 deep guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-16-18-credit-score-explained.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).