Fact-checked by the The Credit Scout editorial team
Quick Answer
Closing an old credit account can immediately raise your credit utilization ratio, which drives 30% of your FICO score, and eventually shorten your average account age, which drives another 15%. The result is a two-stage score drop: one hits within days, the other may not arrive for years. FICO itself advises against closing accounts solely to improve a score.
The closing credit accounts score impact is real, and it works in two phases most people never see coming. Closing a card with a $3,000 limit while carrying $2,000 in balances on other cards can push your utilization from a safe 20% to a damaging 40% overnight, according to myFICO’s own guidance on account closures, this is precisely why FICO does not recommend closing a card for the sole purpose of raising a score.
The second phase is slower and sneakier. The closed account lingers on your report for up to 10 years, which gives many consumers false confidence, but once it ages off, your average account age can reset sharply downward, triggering a delayed score hit years after the original decision. This guide explains both mechanisms, when closing an account is actually worth it, and what to do if you’ve already pulled the trigger.
Key Takeaways
- Credit utilization accounts for 30% of your FICO score, the second-largest factor, meaning any closure that shrinks your available credit can cause an immediate and measurable drop (myFICO, FICO Score Breakdown).
- The average U.S. consumer carried a credit utilization ratio of 29% in Q3 2024, sitting right at the threshold where FICO score damage becomes more pronounced, one account closure can push a borderline profile into penalized territory (Experian, 2024).
- Consumers with exceptional FICO scores (800–850) carry an average utilization of just 7.1%, versus 69.8% for those in the poor score range, illustrating how tightly utilization and score quality track each other (LendingTree, citing Experian/FICO data, 2024).
- People with a perfect 850 FICO score have an average oldest account age of 30 years, showing why closing long-standing accounts chips away at one of the most durable scoring advantages (FICO, 2023).
- The average U.S. FICO score fell to 714 in October 2025, the first annual decline since 2013, providing context for how sensitive scores are to credit-behavior shifts like account closures (The Motley Fool, citing FICO, 2025).
In This Guide
- Why Closing an Old Account Feels Like the Right Move
- The Utilization Spike: Immediate Score Damage Explained
- The Credit Age Time Bomb: A Delayed Drop, Not a Avoided One
- What the FICO vs. VantageScore Difference Means for You
- When Closing Makes Sense, and What to Do Instead
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Closing an Old Account Feels Like the Right Move
Paying off a balance and wanting a clean slate is one of the most natural impulses in personal finance, but it is one of the most expensive ones for your credit score. The same goes for closing a card to avoid an annual fee, or shelving a store card you opened five years ago and haven’t touched since. These are rational-seeming decisions, and that is exactly why they catch people off guard.
The Silent Work an Unused Card Is Doing
A zero-balance card that sits in a drawer is quietly protecting your score in two ways simultaneously. Its credit limit is inflating your total available credit, which keeps your utilization ratio lower. And its age, every month it stays open, is pushing your average account age higher. Remove it, and you break both levers at once.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau warns that closing an existing credit card can increase your credit utilization ratio and lower your score, and explicitly advises consumers not to assume that closing a card will improve their credit. That last part matters: many people close accounts believing it signals financial responsibility to lenders. It does not. Lenders and scoring models read a closed account as a reduction in capacity, not a demonstration of discipline.
myFICO states it never recommends closing a credit card solely to raise a FICO Score. A $0-balance card with a high limit is an asset to your score, not a liability, even if you never use it.
If you’ve made this kind of mistake before, you’re not alone, it shows up repeatedly in lists of credit building mistakes that quietly damage your score. The good news is that understanding the mechanics makes the damage preventable going forward.
The Utilization Spike: Immediate Score Damage Explained
Closing a credit card account shrinks your total available credit the moment the closure is reported, and that reduction shows up in your utilization ratio before anything else changes. This is the fastest-acting damage mechanism in the closing credit accounts score impact chain.
The Math Behind the Spike
Here is a concrete example. Suppose you carry $2,000 in balances across all your cards, and your total available credit is $10,000 across four accounts. Your utilization is 20%, a solid position. Now close one card with a $3,000 limit and a zero balance. Your balances stay at $2,000, but your available credit drops to $7,000. Utilization jumps to roughly 29% overnight. That single closure pushed you from a comfortable range into a territory where score damage becomes more pronounced, according to Experian’s analysis of credit utilization thresholds.
“When you close a credit card account, you lose the available credit limit on that account…this makes your overall credit utilization rate, or the percentage of your available credit you’re using, increase.”
What most articles miss is the per-card dimension. Scoring models penalize not just your aggregate utilization but also the utilization on individual cards that carry balances. Closing a card with a zero balance and a high limit can push utilization on a remaining card with a balance into a penalized range, amplifying the score hit beyond what the total-portfolio math alone would suggest.
Credit utilization (amounts owed) drives 30% of your FICO score, the second-largest factor after payment history. Consumers with exceptional scores (800–850) maintain an average utilization of just 7.1%, compared to 69.8% for those in the poor score range.
The Credit Age Time Bomb: A Delayed Drop, Not a Avoided One
The most common reassurance people give themselves after closing an old account is “it stays on my report for 10 years, so I’m fine.” Technically true. Practically misleading. The real damage is deferred, not avoided.
How FICO Measures Credit Age
FICO’s length-of-credit-history factor, worth 15% of your score according to Experian’s breakdown of FICO scoring factors, actually tracks three separate figures: the age of your oldest account, the age of your newest account, and the average age of all accounts. While a closed account remains on your report, it continues contributing to all three calculations. The clock starts running against you only when it finally drops off.
Run the numbers on a concrete scenario: close a 10-year-old card today while keeping two cards that are each 2 years old. Right now, your average account age across those three accounts is about 4.7 years. The closed account stays on your report, so nothing changes immediately. Ten years from now, when it finally ages off, your remaining accounts will be 12 years old each, but without the original anchor, your average account age resets to 12 years. That sounds fine, until you consider that you’ll likely have opened new accounts in the interim that bring the average down much further. The delayed reset is real and predictable; it just doesn’t announce itself.
As Experian explains, even after closing a credit card, information about how you managed that account will stay on your report for 10 years from the closed date, which means the history counts in your favor during that window, and then disappears (Experian, Will Closing a Credit Card Hurt Your Credit?).
The Involuntary Closure Risk
There is a version of this problem that consumers don’t choose: issuers can and do close cards for inactivity. No industry-wide rule governs how long inactivity must last before an issuer acts, each lender sets its own threshold. The score impact of an issuer-initiated closure is identical to a consumer-initiated one: you lose the available credit and, eventually, the account age. The difference is you may never see it coming.
The practical fix is simple. Put a small recurring charge on any card you want to keep active, a streaming subscription, a utility autopay, and set it to pay in full each month. The card stays open and reporting with no financial or behavioral risk. This one habit can protect years of credit age from disappearing through inactivity.

What the FICO vs. VantageScore Difference Means for You
This is the detail most articles skip entirely, and it can cause real confusion. Some VantageScore models exclude closed accounts from the credit age calculation altogether, while FICO includes them for as long as they remain on the report, up to 10 years. The same account closure can produce different score movements depending on which model you’re checking.
Why This Matters More Than It Sounds
Most free credit score apps and bank dashboards display a VantageScore, not a FICO Score. If a closure immediately drops a closed account from VantageScore’s age-of-history calculation, the score shown in your app may fall sharply right away, while your FICO Score, which retains the closed account in its calculations, moves less. Or the opposite: your app shows minimal movement, and you conclude the closure was harmless, while your FICO Score is quietly taking a larger hit that lenders will see.
Approximately 90% of top lenders use FICO scores for major credit decisions. When applying for a mortgage or auto loan, the score that matters is almost certainly a FICO variant. Checking only a VantageScore-based monitoring app after a closure can give a systematically inaccurate picture of your exposure. For a fuller look at how scoring models affect borrowing decisions, the comparison in our guide to secured vs. unsecured credit cards is useful context on what lenders actually evaluate.
FICO Score 8 remains the most widely used model among mortgage and auto lenders. The free score shown in most banking apps is typically a VantageScore, and the two models can respond differently to the same account closure.
When Closing Makes Sense, and What to Do Instead
Closing an old account is defensible in a narrow set of circumstances, and knowing when those apply is just as important as knowing the risks.
The Cases Where Closing Is Actually Rational
Annual fee math is the clearest one. If a card charges a fee that genuinely exceeds its rewards and benefits, and the issuer offers no product-change option, then paying the fee to preserve a credit age benefit can be a bad financial trade. A fee of $150 a year on a card that provides $40 in value is costing you $110 annually for a score benefit that may be minimal if you already have low utilization and multiple open accounts. Close it, accept the modest score adjustment, and redirect the fee savings.
Behavioral risk is a second legitimate reason. If keeping a card open is a documented spending trigger and you have no other mechanism to control it, the score dip may genuinely be worth the financial discipline. The same logic applies to joint accounts entangled in divorce or other contentious situations where the financial and legal risk clearly exceeds the credit score cost. If you’re rebuilding after a major life disruption, the guidance in our credit repair after divorce recovery plan covers how to sequence these decisions.
What to Do Instead of Closing
The product-change option deserves more attention than it typically gets. Most major issuers will downgrade a card to a no-annual-fee version of the same product, preserving the original open date, the account number, and the credit limit. You eliminate the fee without triggering any utilization spike or age disruption. This is the cleanest solution to the most common closure trigger, and it is the first call to make before any account closure.
If you must close an account, requesting a credit limit increase on a remaining card beforehand can offset at least part of the utilization hit. Most issuers allow a soft-pull limit increase request. A $3,000 limit increase elsewhere before closing a $3,000-limit card leaves your total available credit nearly unchanged.
| Strategy | Utilization Impact | Credit Age Impact | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product Change (Downgrade) | None, limit preserved | None, original date preserved | Annual fee cards with a no-fee version |
| Card Lock / Freeze | None, limit preserved | None, account stays open | Spending triggers, inactive cards |
| Small Autopay Charge | None, limit preserved | None, keeps account active | Preventing involuntary closure |
| Limit Increase Then Close | Partially offset | Full age loss after 10 years | When closure is unavoidable |
| Close Outright | Immediate spike likely | Delayed loss after 10 years | Fee exceeds value, no PC option exists |
If You’ve Already Closed the Account
Check with the issuer first. Some will reinstate a voluntarily closed account within a short window, often 30 to 60 days, with the original open date intact. If that window has passed, focus on accelerating utilization recovery by paying down balances on remaining cards. Then pull your credit report from AnnualCreditReport.com and confirm the closed account is reporting as “closed in good standing.” An incorrect negative notation can be disputed and, if it is a data error, corrected.
One honest concession worth making: if your current utilization is already well under 10% across all cards and you have four or more open accounts, closing one old card may produce only a one-to-five point drop rather than a dramatic swing. The risk is highly profile-dependent. A score simulator, available through myFICO’s paid service or some issuer portals, can give a profile-specific estimate before you act. Even a modest drop is worth avoiding if the product-change option eliminates the trigger entirely.

For anyone in the early stages of building credit and wondering how account age compounds over time, the story of how a recent college graduate built a 700+ credit score in under two years shows exactly how account age and utilization management work together from the start. And if your current situation involves recovering from negative marks rather than optimizing a healthy profile, the DIY credit repair guide walks through the full dispute and recovery process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does closing a credit card hurt your score immediately?
Yes, the utilization impact is typically immediate. Once the closure is reported to the credit bureaus, your total available credit drops and your utilization ratio rises, which scoring models register within the same reporting cycle. The credit age impact, by contrast, is deferred until the closed account eventually ages off your report.
How many points will my credit score drop if I close a credit card?
The drop depends on your specific credit profile. If the closed card held a large share of your total available credit, the utilization spike alone can cost 10 to 50 points on a mid-range score. Consumers already carrying high utilization will feel a sharper hit. Those with very low utilization across many accounts may see only a one-to-five point change. Score simulators on myFICO’s platform can give a profile-specific estimate.
Will a closed account in good standing stay on my credit report?
A closed account in good standing typically remains on your credit report for up to 10 years from the closure date. During that window, it continues to factor into FICO’s length-of-history calculations. The score risk arrives when the account finally ages off and your average account age resets, sometimes years after you’ve stopped thinking about the original closure.
Is it better to close a credit card or leave it open with a zero balance?
In most cases, leaving it open is better for your score. A zero-balance card contributes its full credit limit to your available credit (lowering utilization) and its age to your length-of-history calculation. The only meaningful exceptions are an annual fee that clearly exceeds the card’s value and no product-change option available, or a documented behavioral risk from keeping the card accessible.
What is a product change, and how does it protect my credit score?
A product change is a request to your card issuer to convert your existing card to a different version of the same product, typically a no-annual-fee card from the same issuer. Because the account number and original open date carry over, neither your credit utilization nor your credit age is affected. It is the most direct alternative to closing a card when the only reason for closure is the annual fee.
Before calling to close any card, ask the issuer one question first: “Is there a no-fee version of this card I could switch to?” Most major issuers have one. A product change takes five minutes and preserves both your credit limit and your account’s original open date, eliminating the score risk entirely.
Sources
- myFICO, What’s In Your Credit Score
- myFICO, Impact of Closing a Credit Card Account
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Does Closing a Credit Card Hurt My Credit?
- Experian, Will Closing a Credit Card Hurt Your Credit?
- Equifax, How Closing Credit Cards Can Impact Your Credit Scores
- CNBC Select, How Closing an Old Credit Card Affects Your Credit Score (featuring Rod Griffin, Experian)
- FICO, Understanding the 850 FICO Score
- LendingTree, Credit Score Statistics



