normally 30 days
It depends entirely on the company as to whether they report it or not. They can report any late payment, even if made during the grace period. If they don't report it, it will not affect your credit. If they do report it, it will show up in the credit reports.
A mortgage will first reflect as a late payment on your report once it is 30 days late -- at the Lender's discretion. Call the Lender to see that the mortgage was posted in time. Even if it was only a day or so late, and you have a good history with them, they may choose to not report this payment as late. If it was a day late, and you don't ask, they will report it.
If you have not made any late payments since then, this late payment won't reflect heavily on your credit score. The late will stay on your credit report for seven years but as each year passes, it will become less important.
Only late payments that are (at least) 30-59 days may be reported in the 30 day counter and only payments made that late change your rating from an R1 or I1 to an R2-I2. However, should a payment be even ONE DAY past due, that information can be reported on your credit report without changing the RI-I1 status. There are different fields of information on your credit report. So, it is uncommon, but possible, for a past due payment to be reported that is not actually 30 days late.
I just had my credit reviewed. It showed me exactly which payments were 30 days late by show the month and year of every late payment I had (and even 90 and 120 days). But it did not show what day they reported it. There were also some late payments I knew I had, but did not show up because the company did not report it. Ask the company how long after a delenquency will they report it, they will usually tell you. It is is only or first offense and you don't make a habbit of it you are probably going to be okay.
as a repossession
40
normally 30 days
When you are late on your payment for a credit card, car loan, mortgage, etc... these "creditors" can report this late payment to the credit bureau that they have a relationship with (either Trans Union, Experian, or Equifax).These credit bureaus in turn stick it on your credit report which negatively affects your credit score.There are30 day late payment items,60 day late payment items,and 90 day late payment items.Many people remove these items by disputing them with the credit bureau (the credit bureau then has 30 days to go back to the creditor to verify the late payment). Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't.
It depends entirely on the company as to whether they report it or not. They can report any late payment, even if made during the grace period. If they don't report it, it will not affect your credit. If they do report it, it will show up in the credit reports.
A mortgage will first reflect as a late payment on your report once it is 30 days late -- at the Lender's discretion. Call the Lender to see that the mortgage was posted in time. Even if it was only a day or so late, and you have a good history with them, they may choose to not report this payment as late. If it was a day late, and you don't ask, they will report it.
If a credit card is closed it cannot have a balance. Just because you have stopped using the ard you cannot declare the account closed. If you owe even one penny, the account is open and the credit card company can 'report a 30 day late'
It should show paid on your report. It may still show that it was a delinquent account. When you pay it off, be sure to get a receipt. That way if someone looks at your credit and asks you about it, you have proof that it's paid. The update can occur within one day.
If you have not made any late payments since then, this late payment won't reflect heavily on your credit score. The late will stay on your credit report for seven years but as each year passes, it will become less important.
Only late payments that are (at least) 30-59 days may be reported in the 30 day counter and only payments made that late change your rating from an R1 or I1 to an R2-I2. However, should a payment be even ONE DAY past due, that information can be reported on your credit report without changing the RI-I1 status. There are different fields of information on your credit report. So, it is uncommon, but possible, for a past due payment to be reported that is not actually 30 days late.
The creditor can charge you a late payment fee and report you late to the credit bureaus. One 30 day late payment can lower your credit score 90 points and cause you higher interest rates and cost you more money in the future. You can try to contact your creditor and ask to have the late payment removed if you have paid on time. You can also dispute it to the credit bureaus and try to have it removed that way.