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Credit Explained

Hard vs Soft Credit Inquiry (What It Means for Your Score)

Not all credit checks are the same. A soft inquiry won’t hurt your score. A hard inquiry can, but usually only a little.

Quick answer

  • Soft inquiry: Doesn’t affect your score. Used for pre-approvals and checking your own credit.
  • Hard inquiry: May slightly lower your score for a short time. Used when you apply for credit.

What a “credit inquiry” is

A credit inquiry is a record that someone checked your credit report. It’s one small piece of how lenders judge risk.


Soft inquiry (soft pull)

A soft inquiry is a credit check that does not impact your credit score.

Common soft inquiry examples:

  • Checking your own credit score/report
  • Credit card “pre-approval” offers
  • Background/identity checks (sometimes)
  • Existing lenders reviewing your account (for increases, promos, etc.)

You might still see soft inquiries listed on your report, but lenders typically don’t treat them as a negative signal.


Hard inquiry (hard pull)

A hard inquiry happens when you apply for new credit and the lender checks your report to make a decision. This can lower your score a bit, because it signals you’re seeking new debt.

Common hard inquiry examples:

  • Applying for a credit card
  • Applying for a mortgage or auto loan
  • Applying for a personal loan
  • Some apartment utilities / phone financing (depends on the company)

How much does a hard inquiry affect your score?

Usually a small drop. The bigger issue is lots of hard inquiries close together, especially if you also open multiple new accounts.

How long do hard inquiries last?

A hard inquiry can show on your report for up to about two years, but the score impact is typically strongest early and fades with time.


The “rate shopping” rule (mortgages & auto loans)

If you’re shopping for the same type of loan (like a mortgage or auto loan), scoring models often treat multiple inquiries in a short window as one for scoring, so you can compare rates without getting punished over and over.

Practical takeaway:

  • Do your rate quotes in a tight time window.
  • Make sure every lender knows you’re “rate shopping.”
  • Credit cards don’t work the same way (each app is usually its own inquiry).

How to avoid unnecessary hard inquiries

  • Ask: “Will this be a hard pull or a soft pull?” before you apply.
  • Use pre-qualification tools first (usually soft pulls).
  • Don’t apply for multiple credit cards in a short span unless you have a plan.
  • If you’re about to get a mortgage, keep new credit applications to a minimum.

FAQ

Does checking my own credit score hurt it?

No. That’s a soft inquiry.

Can an employer run a hard inquiry?

Employment-related credit checks are typically soft inquiries (and usually require your permission), but rules vary by state and situation.

What if I see an inquiry I don’t recognize?

Start by contacting the company listed. If it still doesn’t make sense, dispute it with the credit bureau(s).

Next up: keeping your score stable while applying for loans (timing, spacing, and what to pause).

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