A 750 credit score puts you in the “very good” category—unlocking the best interest rates and easiest approvals. But reaching 750 requires more than just good behavior; it requires time.

Getting to 750 is harder than reaching “good credit” (670+) because the higher you go, the more your credit age matters. You can’t fast-track a long credit history, which is why reaching 750 typically takes 2-4 years.

What a 750 Credit Score Gets You

Financial Product With 650 Score With 750 Score Savings
30-year mortgage ($400K) 7.5% APR 6.5% APR $250/month ($90K total)
Auto loan ($35K, 60 months) 10% APR 5% APR $93/month ($5,580 total)
Credit cards 25% APR 15% APR Significant on balances
Personal loan ($20K) 16% APR 9% APR $57/month
Approval rates Often denied Almost always approved Saves time, applications

See our guide on credit scores needed for best rates for complete details.

Timeline to 750: Based on Starting Point

From No Credit History

Year Expected Score Key Milestones
6 months 650-680 First FICO score, secured card established
Year 1 680-710 Consistent payments, utilization under 10%
Year 2 710-740 Credit age helping, possibly 2-3 accounts
Year 3 730-760 750 typically achievable
Year 4+ 750-780+ Solidified excellent credit

Total timeline: 2-4 years

See our guide on building credit from nothing for the detailed journey.

From Fair Credit (580-669)

Month Expected Score Key Actions
3 620-680 Utilization fixed, errors disputed
6 660-720 On-time payments building
12 700-740 Approaching 750 if no major negatives
18-24 720-760 750 achievable for most

Total timeline: 12-24 months

From Good Credit (670-739)

Month Expected Score Key Actions
3 690-740 Optimize utilization (under 5-10%)
6 710-755 Continued perfect payments
12 730-770 750 achievable

Total timeline: 6-12 months

From Bad Credit (Below 580)

Year Expected Score Key Actions
1 580-650 Rebuild with secured cards
2 640-710 Positive history growing
3 700-750 750 possible if negatives aging
4 730-780 750 achievable for most

Total timeline: 3-4+ years

What Score Factors Must Align for 750+

Reaching 750 requires good performance across all five scoring factors:

Payment History (35% of Score)

Requirement What It Means
100% on-time payments No late payments in recent history
Older late payments aging Late payments from 3+ years ago hurt less
No recent delinquencies 0 accounts currently past due

Impact: Even one recent late payment can prevent reaching 750. See how long late payments stay on your report.

Credit Utilization (30% of Score)

Utilization Level Impact on 750 Goal
1-5% Optimal for 750+
6-10% Good, 750 still possible
11-30% Acceptable, may cap at 730-740
31%+ Will prevent reaching 750

Keep utilization under 10%—or ideally under 5%—to maximize this factor.

Credit Age (15% of Score)

Average Age Impact
5+ years Strongly supports 750+
3-5 years Supports 750 with other factors strong
2-3 years 750 possible but harder
Under 2 years Very difficult to reach 750

This is why 750 takes time—you can’t accelerate account aging. Becoming an authorized user on old accounts helps.

Credit Mix (10% of Score)

Mix Impact
Credit cards + installment loan Optimal
Credit cards only Acceptable
Only one account type May limit score slightly

Having both revolving (credit cards) and installment accounts (loans) helps, but isn’t essential for 750.

New Credit (10% of Score)

Hard Inquiries Impact
0-2 in past year Good
3-4 in past year May slightly limit score
5+ in past year Will hurt 750 efforts

Hard inquiries stay on your report for 2 years but only impact your score for about 12 months.

Month-by-Month Plan to 750

Months 1-3: Foundation

Week Action Why
1 Pull all 3 credit reports Know your starting point
1 Check credit score for free Establish baseline
2-4 Pay cards down to under 10% utilization Immediate score boost
4-8 Dispute any errors Remove inaccurate negatives
8-12 Set up autopay on all accounts Prevent future late payments

Months 4-12: Building

Action Frequency Impact
Make all payments on time Monthly Builds payment history
Keep utilization under 10% Monthly Maintains 30% factor
Avoid new credit applications Ongoing Allows inquiries to age
Request credit limit increases Every 6 months Lowers utilization automatically

Year 2+: Optimization

Action Why It Matters
Keep oldest accounts open Protects credit age
Add account diversity (if thin) Improves credit mix
Monitor for fraud Prevents new negatives
Be patient Age continues benefiting score

Common Obstacles to Reaching 750

Why You Might Be Stuck Below 750

Issue Solution Timeline
Utilization too high Pay down cards 1-2 months
Credit age too young Wait (or authorized user) 6+ months
Recent late payment Time + perfect payments 12-24 months
Too many recent inquiries Stop applying 12 months
Collections on report Pay for delete or wait 12-24 months

The “740 Plateau”

Many people get stuck between 720-740. Usually the issue is:

Common Cause What’s Happening
Utilization slightly high Even 15-20% can cap you below 750
Credit age not quite there Average age under 3 years
Recent inquiry Single inquiry can hold you back

The fix: Lower utilization to under 5%, avoid all new applications, and wait 6-12 months.

How Long 750 Takes vs. How Long It Lasts

Event Impact on 750 Score
Single maxed-out card Can drop 50+ points immediately
30-day late payment Can drop 60-100+ points
New credit application 5-15 point temporary drop
Closing oldest card 10-30 point drop (credit age, utilization)

Reaching 750 takes years; losing it can happen in one billing cycle. Maintaining good habits is essential.

Realistic Expectations

Goal Realistic Timeline Why
650 to 750 12-18 months Need time + perfect behavior
700 to 750 6-12 months Closer, but still need aging
No credit to 750 2-4 years Credit age is limiting factor
Bad credit to 750 3-5 years Must overcome negatives first

Bottom Line

Question Answer
From no credit 2-4 years
From fair credit (580-669) 12-24 months
From good credit (670-739) 6-12 months
From bad credit (under 580) 3-5 years
Most important factor Credit age (requires time)
You can control Utilization, payments, applications

A 750 credit score is achievable for most people—but it requires patience. Focus on what you can control (utilization, on-time payments, limiting applications) while waiting for credit age to do its part.