One Score May No Longer Decide

The FHFA has cleared VantageScore 4.0 alongside Classic FICO, a meaningful shift for underserved borrowers.

One Score May No Longer Decide

For decades, getting approved for a mortgage has often come down to a single number. One score, generated by one dominant model, carried outsized weight in determining whether someone could buy a home. It didn't matter if you paid your rent on time for years or never missed a utility bill. If that number didn't meet the threshold, the answer was simple: no.

The problem wasn't always financial behavior. It was visibility. Traditional credit scoring models, particularly older versions of FICO, were limited in what they measured. They focused heavily on credit cards, auto loans, and other forms of traditional debt. Meanwhile, millions of consumers consistently demonstrated responsible financial habits through rent, utilities, and other recurring obligations that simply weren't captured in the same way.

The System Is Beginning to Shift

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to accept VantageScore 4.0 alongside the Classic FICO model. This is a significant development and introduces long-awaited competition into the conforming mortgage market. For the first time in modern history, lenders working with these government-sponsored enterprises have an alternative credit scoring model that may better reflect a borrower's full financial picture.

VantageScore 4.0 expands the lens. It incorporates trended credit data and can factor in payment behaviors over time, including rent and utility histories when available. In practical terms, this means that consistent, everyday financial responsibility may now carry more weight in lending decisions.

The Transition Is Not Overnight

Implementation is still in progress across the industry. Lenders are updating their systems, integrating new scoring models, and adapting to revised selling guidelines. As with any large-scale change in financial infrastructure, adoption will take time, and not all lenders will move at the same pace.

This uneven rollout creates a temporary but important reality: who you choose to work with matters more than ever. For borrowers, a previous denial may not tell the whole story anymore. A no from the past was based on a specific model at a specific moment in time. As the criteria evolve, so does the potential outcome. If you've been turned down before, it may be worth revisiting your options with fresh eyes.

This content is for educational purposes only. All loans are subject to credit approval and lender guidelines. This is not a commitment to lend. Equal Housing Lender.

Written by the FinExpress Mortgage team

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