BLUEPRINT

Advertiser Disclosure

Editorial Note: Blueprint may earn a commission from affiliate partner links featured here on our site. This commission does not influence our editors' opinions or evaluations. Please view our full advertiser disclosure policy.

Staying on top of all your bills can be difficult and sometimes you’ll have to miss a bill to prioritize other necessities. The good news — missing a payment by a couple of days or weeks won’t hurt your credit. However, once you’re 30 days past due, the late payment could be reported to the credit bureaus. It can then stay on your credit report for seven years, even if you bring your account current.

Disclosure

¹$1,000,000 Identity Theft Insurance for Eligible Losses: Identity Theft Insurance underwritten by insurance company subsidiaries or affiliates of American International Group‚ Inc.. The description herein is a summary and intended for informational purposes only and does not include all terms, conditions and exclusions of the policies described. Please refer to the actual policies for terms, conditions, and exclusions of coverage. Coverage may not be available in all jurisdictions.

No one can prevent all identity theft or monitor all transactions effectively.

What is a late payment?

A late payment is when you don’t make your minimum required payment by a bill’s due date.

Some creditors offer a grace period and give you a couple of days or weeks to pay your past-due bill without a penalty. With others, being late by even one day could lead to a late payment fee and lost benefits, such as a promotional interest rate on a credit card.

When will a late payment hurt your credit?

Although you only need to be one day late to get charged a fee, the timeline is different when it comes to credit reporting.

You need to be at least 30 days late for a creditor (such as a lender or credit card issuer) to report your payment as late to the credit bureaus. Accounts that are one to 29 days late are still considered current.

This means you have time to bring your account current — or come to a different arrangement with the creditor — before a late payment hurts your credit.

How do late payments affect your credit score?

Late payments that wind up in your credit report will often hurt your credit score. Multiple late payments — either on different accounts or missing several payments in a row — can hurt your score even more. However, the specific impact depends on your overall credit profile.

For example, FICO looked at how different actions could affect five people’s credit scores. A single 30-day late payment led to a score drop of 17 to 83 points — a fairly wide range. Falling further behind on payments can also increase the impact and a 90-day late payment led to score drops of 47 to 113 points.

A late payment will generally hurt your score less if you have a low credit score. If you have a history of missing payments, then missing another payment isn’t much of a surprise. Your low credit score already accounts for this possibility. 

However, if you’ve never missed a payment and have excellent credit, a late payment could be particularly troubling — perhaps a sign that your financial situation has changed. And you may experience a larger score drop, reflecting the increased chance that you’ll miss another payment soon.

How long do late payments stay on your credit report?

Late payments can stay on your credit report for up to seven years and they could affect your credit score the entire time. However, the exact timeline will depend on whether you bring your account current after missing a payment.

If you miss a payment and bring the account current, the late payment will be removed seven years later. When you miss several payments in a row, that group of late payments gets removed after seven years. And the timeline is the same whether your account is still open or closed.

For example, if you pay off and close your credit card, the closed account will stay on your credit report for 10 years. A late payment in the card’s payment history will fall off your report seven years after you missed the payment, but the rest of the account can stay in your report and continue helping your credit.

If you miss a payment and never bring your account current, the late payment will mark the original delinquency date for the account. After several missed payments, the creditor could charge off your account and send it to collections. Now, you might see the original account and a separate collections account on your credit report.

When your missed payments lead to an account closure, the credit bureau will remove the entire account and any related collection accounts seven years after the original delinquency date — the first late payment in the series.

How to avoid making late payments

Keeping track of your bills’ due dates and setting up automatic payments might help you from accidentally missing a payment. Although you’ll also want to make sure you have enough money in your accounts to avoid overdrawing your account.

If you’re going to miss a payment because you can’t afford all your bills, try contacting your creditors before your bill’s due date. They may offer a temporary hardship plan and defer or lower your payment.

You could look for ways to lower other bills as well. For example, asking your utility providers if there are any assistance programs available and then use those savings for your other bills. 
Also, consider reaching out to a credit counselor if you’re struggling with credit card debt in general. The counselor might be able to get you on a debt management plan (DMP) and negotiate lower interest rates, monthly payments, waived fees and bring past-due credit card accounts current without requiring a large payment.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

One late payment can affect your credit score, although the exact impact will depend on your overall credit profile. People who have good credit may experience a larger score drop than those who have a low credit score.

Late payments can affect your credit score for up to seven years — the entire time they’re on your credit report. However, the effect is most significant when you first miss a payment. Bringing your accounts current and making on-time payments can help you recover from a late payment.

If there’s an error in your credit report, you can dispute it with the creditor that misreported the late payment or with the credit bureau. For example, you might be able to dispute a late payment and get it removed from your credit report if you paid the bill before it became 30 days past due.

Blueprint is an independent publisher and comparison service, not an investment advisor. The information provided is for educational purposes only and we encourage you to seek personalized advice from qualified professionals regarding specific financial decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Blueprint has an advertiser disclosure policy. The opinions, analyses, reviews or recommendations expressed in this article are those of the Blueprint editorial staff alone. Blueprint adheres to strict editorial integrity standards. The information is accurate as of the publish date, but always check the provider’s website for the most current information.

Louis DeNicola is a freelance writer who specializes in consumer credit, finance, and fraud. He has several consumer credit-related certifications and works with various lenders, publishers, credit bureaus, Fortune 500s, and FinTech startups. Outside of work, you can often find Louis at his local climbing gym or cooking up a storm in the kitchen.

Robin Saks Frankel is a credit cards lead editor at USA TODAY Blueprint. Previously, she was a credit cards and personal finance deputy editor for Forbes Advisor. She has also covered credit cards and related content for other national web publications including NerdWallet, Bankrate and HerMoney. She's been featured as a personal finance expert in outlets including CNBC, Business Insider, CBS Marketplace, NASDAQ's Trade Talks and has appeared on or contributed to The New York Times, Fox News, CBS Radio, ABC Radio, NPR, International Business Times and NBC, ABC and CBS TV affiliates nationwide. She holds an M.S. in Business and Economics Journalism from Boston University. Follow her on Twitter at @robinsaks.