Getting Approved
How to Get Approved For a Loan
Getting approved for a loan or line of credit is often a matter of persistence.
If you complete an application for a loan and are still rejected, the very first thing you should do is to be persistent and never give up. There are many reasons why a person may be turned down for credit, but whatever the reason, you have a legal right to ask a creditor for an explanation.
Figuring Out Why You Were Declined Credit
By knowing the cause of your rejection you can make adjustments in your lifestyle and resubmit a strengthened application. I know a man who was desperate to get involved in real estate investing. He applied for a loan and was turned down. Rather than leave the bank disgruntled, he asked the banker to explain why he was rejected. He found out his forecasted profit and loss statement was unimpressive. He asked an accountant to improve the presentation and went to another bank. This bank also rejected his loan application, but again, my friend learned things from that banker and moved on. The fifth bank he approached approved his loan.
How to Get Approved For a Loan
When you are dealing with creditors you will know who is the cooperative sort, and who is not. I have learned from experience that lenders like approving loans to people they have previously done business with. Don’t walk into a bank off the street and expect that bank to jump through hoops to approve your application. However, if you have done business with a bank for a few years, you deserve some consideration. Cultivate a relationship with your banker by avoiding bounced checks, maintaining whatever you can afford in a savings account, appearing well dressed (I mean clean and neat, not necessarily a suit) and polite when conducting any bank business.
One Alternative You May Try
In desperation, you may want to ask a relative to co-sign for you. A co-signer is someone who generally has better credit than the person he is co-signing for. He is also the person a creditor will go after first in the event you do not pay off your debt. Why? Because they know that co-signers don’t want their credit ratings ruined and will quickly settle the obligation.
If you are trying to establish or rebuild credit, co-signers can help you achieve that goal. Naturally you wouldn’t need a co-signer every time you apply for credit. After paying off one obligation with a co-signer, it should be much easier to acquire more credit on your own.
Co-signers are usually friends or relatives. When you find someone willing to help they should be offered some compensation agreeable to both of you. Your application for credit will be approved primarily on the strength of your co-signer’s credit.
Like most things in life, getting approved for a loan is often a matter of persistence. Keep trying and never give up. Eventually, things will work out.
Phillip Collinsworth co-hosts a website dedicated to teaching people how to take profits out of the stock market. To learn more about his stock trading system, please visit: http://www.penny-stock-advisor.com
