Crowned Credit
Poor Credit · FICO Poor range

Is a 566 Credit Score Good?

Short answer: A 566 credit score falls in the Poor range (well below the U.S. average). It sits at the upper third of the Poor range, 284 points from a perfect 850 and 14 points below the Fair tier. Where you land within a range matters — and inaccurate items on your report can hold your number down.

RatingPoor
Position on 300–85048%
Points to 850284
To Fair+14

What a 566 Credit Score Really Means

A 566 FICO score sits at the upper third of the Poor range — 284 points from a perfect 850 and 266 points above the 300 floor. It sits 14 points below the Fair tier (which begins at 580). Lenders in this range typically see higher risk, so approvals often come with the strictest terms or require a secured product or co-signer.

The part most people miss about a 566:

Your score is a snapshot of what's on your credit report today. If any account, balance, late mark, or collection on that report is inaccurate, outdated, or unverifiable, it may be dragging your 566 lower than it should be. Federal law gives you the right to dispute those items — and that's often the fastest legitimate lever, though results vary by profile.

What You Can Typically Qualify For at 566

Lenders weigh far more than one number — income, debt load, and the full report all matter — so treat the following as general context, not a promise. Approvals and terms vary by lender and applicant.

  • 🏠 Mortgages: This range is below the cutoff many conventional programs prefer; some government-backed options consider lower scores, typically with additional requirements.
  • 🚗 Auto loans: Financing is often available in this range, but the interest rate offered generally reflects a Poor-tier profile rather than the lowest advertised rates.
  • 💳 Credit cards: Secured cards and starter unsecured cards are the most common approvals in this range, and can be used to build history.
  • 🏡 Renting: Many landlords review credit; a Poor-range score may prompt a larger deposit or a co-signer request depending on the market.

These are general patterns, not guarantees. Your actual offers depend on your complete financial picture.

Factors That Influence a 566 Score

These are the standard FICO factors. We can't promise a specific increase — results vary — but understanding them tells you where the leverage usually is.

Payment History (~35%)

The single biggest factor. Late payments, charge-offs, and collections weigh heavily. Inaccurate late marks are a common, disputable error.

Credit Utilization (~30%)

How much of your available revolving credit you're using. Lowering balances relative to limits is one of the faster legitimate levers.

Length of History (~15%)

The age of your accounts. Keeping older accounts open generally helps; closing them can shorten your average age.

Credit Mix (~10%)

A blend of revolving and installment accounts. Not worth taking on debt you don't need, but relevant at the margin.

New Credit / Inquiries (~10%)

Hard inquiries and newly opened accounts can dip a score temporarily. Unauthorized or duplicate inquiries may be disputable.

Report Accuracy (the wildcard)

Errors don't have their own percentage — but an inaccurate account can distort every factor above. This is where a dispute review starts.

How Crowned Credit Helps at 566

We don't sell a number. We review what's actually on your report, challenge what shouldn't be there, and coach you on the factors above.

01

Pull & Review

We review all three bureau reports and flag every inaccurate, outdated, or unverifiable item that could be holding your score down.

02

Dispute & Escalate

We dispute those items with the bureaus and furnishers under the FCRA, and escalate when they fail to investigate properly.

03

Educate & Build

We coach you on utilization, payment habits, and healthy credit building so progress can hold. Results vary by profile.

566 Credit Score — Frequently Asked Questions

Is a 566 credit score good or bad?

A 566 FICO score is classified as "Poor." A 566 credit score falls in the Poor range (well below the U.S. average). It is neither the bottom nor the top of the scale — it sits 266 points above the 300 floor and 284 points below a perfect 850.

What can I qualify for with a 566 credit score?

Approvals and pricing at 566 vary by lender, product, income, and the rest of your profile, so no outcome is guaranteed. In general, a Poor-range score affects the rates, deposits, and limits you are offered rather than being a simple yes/no. The most reliable way to see your real options is to review your full three-bureau report for errors first.

How can I work toward a higher score than 566?

Scores are generally influenced by payment history, credit utilization, length of history, credit mix, and recent inquiries. Correcting inaccurate or unverifiable items on your report, lowering utilization, and keeping payments current are common, legitimate levers. We do not promise any specific point increase — results vary by profile.

How far is a 566 from the next credit tier?

Reaching the Fair tier from 566 means gaining about 14 points — how long that takes depends entirely on your individual report, and results vary.

Does Crowned Credit guarantee my score will reach a certain number?

No. Under the Credit Repair Organizations Act we cannot and do not guarantee any specific score or result. What we do is review your report, dispute inaccurate or unverifiable items with the bureaus, and educate you on the factors that influence scores. Outcomes depend on your individual credit profile.

Ready to Improve Your Credit Score?

Take the first step towards financial freedom today. Schedule your free consultation with our credit repair experts.

Crowned Credit is a service of Crowned Advisors Inc. This page is for general educational purposes and is not legal or financial advice. Credit-score bands referenced are standard FICO ranges. Results vary based on individual credit profiles and are not guaranteed. We do not promise specific score increases, timelines, or the removal of accurate, current, and verifiable information.