
Money Tips & Education
Credit score secrets: What you need to know about hard inquiries
Feb 23, 2025

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Key takeaways:
When you make a formal application, the lender will check your credit history. This type of credit check is a hard inquiry.
Hard inquiries typically cause your score to dip by a few points temporarily.
One way to avoid hard inquiries and their potential effect on your credit score is to research loans from lenders who can prequalify you with a soft inquiry that doesn’t affect your credit score.
It’s smart to want to protect your credit standing and avoid actions that could have a negative impact on your score. Understanding how inquiries work is a great way to stay in control of how they affect you.
Let’s explore how hard inquiries work and their potential impact on your credit and finances.
What is a hard inquiry?
A hard inquiry is when someone checks your credit because you applied for something. When you applied, you gave them permission to inquire into (request to view) one or more of your credit reports. This process also goes by the names “hard credit check” and “hard credit pull.”
How does a hard inquiry affect your credit score?
When you apply for credit, the lender’s inquiry could impact your credit scores. Your credit score could go down by a few points. This effect lasts for one year, but diminishes over that time.
Hard inquiries don’t cause a huge impact (usually a loss of fewer than 5 points, according to Experian), and after two years, they fall off your credit report altogether.
Hard inquiries could also affect your eligibility for the credit that you want. Even if your credit score is otherwise high enough to qualify, a lender could deny your application because you have too many hard inquiries. Applying for a lot of credit could mean that you’re in financial distress.
Should you avoid a hard inquiry when shopping for a loan?
It’s a good idea to seek out lenders that don’t use a hard inquiry when you’re still deciding whether to borrow money from them. Some offer prequalification for loans based on a soft credit inquiry instead. Soft inquiries don’t impact your credit score.
If you’re looking for a loan of any kind, it might be worth rate shopping with lenders that offer this option. This strategy could give you an idea of how much money you might be approved to borrow (and the interest rate and fees you'll pay) without harm to your credit score.
Pro tip: Any time you check your own credit, it’s a soft inquiry that doesn’t hurt your score.
When is a hard inquiry necessary?
If you’re borrowing money, a hard credit inquiry is unavoidable. Even if you apply for prequalification with a lender using a soft credit check, when you formally apply for the loan, the lender will pull your credit report. In other words, a hard inquiry.
You’re likely to undergo a hard credit inquiry when you:
Apply for a loan (including personal loans, auto loans, student loans, and mortgages)
Apply for a new credit card or line or credit
Ask for a credit limit increase
Sign up for new utility or cell phone service
Lease a car
An occasional hard inquiry on your credit report isn’t a big deal in most cases.
How to minimize the impact of hard inquiries
While a hard credit inquiry might ultimately be unavoidable in the course of getting a loan, you can lower the impact on your credit score by following these tips.
Rate shop for mortgages, student loans, or car loans
It’s a smart move to talk to multiple lenders to get the best deal. You might assume that applying with four or five home equity loan lenders could equal a loss of 20 or 25 points from your credit score—yikes!
Not necessarily.
If you make all your applications for a mortgage, auto loan, or student loan within a rate-shopping window (14 to 45 days, depending on the loan type and the credit score you’re watching), all of the applications will be treated as one hard credit inquiry where your credit score is concerned.
So confine your rate shopping to two weeks for best results.
Note that rate shopping doesn’t work for any other type of credit application. The credit bureaus can see what kind of lender checked your credit. Only mortgages, student loans, and car loans get a rate shopping window.
Monitor your credit score and reports
Keeping an eye on your credit profile is a good idea if you’re concerned about the impact of hard inquiries. You can sign up for free credit monitoring with a bank or credit card issuer you already do business with, and you can view your credit reports for free at AnnualCreditReport.com.
If you find an inquiry you don’t recognize, it could be a sign of fraud or identity theft. Someone may have opened an account in your name, and you can reach out to the lender to close it.
You can also check your credit report for soft inquiries, which don’t impact your credit score—but could indicate that someone is shopping for loan preapprovals in your name. Keep in mind that when you get credit card and loan solicitations in the mail, those all come with a soft inquiry. When you check your own credit, that’s also a soft inquiry. If you notice a list of soft inquiries on your credit reports, it’s not necessarily because of a nefarious reason.
Pro tip: If you don’t want creditors to do soft inquiries and send you pre-approved offers, you can opt out at optoutprescreen.com.
Focus on credit-positive actions
A few major factors impact your credit score. Focusing on them puts you in a better position to build and maintain a good credit standing, even if you occasionally lose a few points to a hard credit inquiry.
For example, your payment history has the biggest impact on your credit score. The amounts you owe to creditors, especially on credit card accounts, is another huge factor. Paying your bills on time and paying down debt tend to naturally lead to good credit.
What’s next?
Check your credit report for accuracy—make sure your name and other identifying details are correct, along with your credit account information.
Look for lenders that let you prequalify with a soft inquiry before formally applying to borrow money from them.
Rate shop for car, student, and home loans in a 14-day window to shrink the negative impact of hard inquiries.

Written by
Ashley is an ex-museum professional turned content writer and editor. When she switched careers, she could finally focus on her finances. In two years, she went from being deep in debt to owning a home. Ashley has a passion for teaching others how to manage their money better.

Reviewed by
Kimberly is Achieve’s senior editor. She is a financial counselor accredited by the Association for Financial Counseling & Planning Education®, and a mortgage expert for The Motley Fool. She owns and manages a 350-writer content agency.
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