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What a CIBIL Score Actually Is — and What It Isn't

What a CIBIL Score Actually Is — and What It Isn't

Your CIBIL score is a number, not a verdict. Here's how it's calculated, what moves it, and what doesn't.

Priya Sharma

Personal-finance reporter focused on first-time cardholders and CIBIL. CAMS-certified mutual-fund writer.

3 June 2026
4 min read

What a CIBIL score measures

A CIBIL score (also called a CIBIL TransUnion Score) is a 3-digit number between 300 and 900 that summarises your credit history. It's calculated by CIBIL (Credit Information Bureau India Limited), one of four RBI-licensed credit bureaus in India (the others are Experian, Equifax, and CRIF High Mark). Banks report your loan and credit-card repayment behaviour to CIBIL monthly. CIBIL aggregates the data, runs a proprietary algorithm, and produces a score.

The score is not a verdict — it's a probability. It predicts the likelihood that you'll be 90+ days delinquent on a new credit obligation in the next 12–24 months. A score of 800 doesn't mean you're financially safe; it means CIBIL's algorithm thinks you won't miss a payment.

How the score is calculated

CIBIL publishes the factors but not the exact weights. The commonly accepted weighting:

  1. Payment history (35%) — the single biggest factor. Every on-time payment is +1. Every missed or late payment is -1. A single 30-day delinquency can drop your score 50–100 points. A 90-day delinquency can drop it 100–150 points.
  2. Credit utilisation (30%) — the ratio of your outstanding balance to your total credit limit, across all cards. Below 30% is ideal. Above 70% is a red flag.
  3. Credit age (15%) — the age of your oldest credit account. Longer is better. 5+ years is strong.
  4. Credit mix (10%) — having both secured (home loan, auto loan) and unsecured (credit card, personal loan) credit is a small positive. All credit cards and no loans is fine; all loans and no cards is also fine.
  5. Recent inquiries (10%) — the number of hard inquiries in the last 6–12 months. Each application drops your score 5–15 points. The effect fades after 12 months.

What the score is NOT

  • It's not your income or wealth. A high-income person with no credit history has a CIBIL score of NA (or 0 in some reports).
  • It's not updated in real-time. Banks report monthly. A payment you make today may not show in your CIBIL report for 30–45 days.
  • It's not the only score banks use. Many banks also check Experian, Equifax, and CRIF. They look at the full credit report, not just the score.
  • It's not public. Only you and lenders you authorise can see your CIBIL report.
  • It's not used by employers, landlords, or anyone else in India. Only financial institutions.

How to check your CIBIL score

You can get a free CIBIL report once a year from the official CIBIL website (cibil.com). The report shows:

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  • Your current score.
  • All your open credit accounts (cards, loans).
  • Your repayment history on each account.
  • Your credit utilisation per card.
  • All hard inquiries in the last 24 months.
  • Any settled or written-off accounts.

You can also get a free CIBIL score through many banking apps (HDFC, ICICI, SBI) and through the CIBIL app. The report is identical to the paid version; the "free" report from CIBIL is more limited in scope (fewer accounts shown) but accurate.

How to improve your score

The fastest ways:

  1. Pay every card and loan on time, every month, for 6 months straight. This alone can move your score 50–100 points if you had any recent delinquencies.
  2. Reduce your credit utilisation below 30%. If you have a ₹1 lakh limit and your balance is ₹50,000, pay it down to ₹30,000 or below. The effect shows in the next monthly report.
  3. Don't close your oldest card. Even if you don't use it, keep it active with a small monthly charge (a ₹100 Amazon Pay top-up works).
  4. Limit new applications. Apply for credit sparingly. Each application is a -5 to -15 point hit that fades over 12 months.
  5. Dispute errors on your report. If your report shows a closed account as open or a missed payment you didn't miss, dispute it with the bank and CIBIL. Corrections take 30–60 days.

What doesn't move the score

  • Checking your own score — soft inquiries, no impact.
  • Salary credit to your account — not a credit event.
  • Debit card transactions — not a credit event.
  • UPI transactions — not reported to CIBIL.
  • Pre-approved offers from banks — soft inquiries, no impact (until you accept).

The dispute process

If you find an error:

  1. Contact the bank first. Most errors are bank reporting errors (closed accounts still showing open, wrong balances). Banks must investigate within 30 days.
  2. Escalate to CIBIL if the bank doesn't respond. CIBIL will mediate and update your report.
  3. Escalate to the RBI Banking Ombudsman if neither resolves. This is rarely needed but is your final recourse.

A worked timeline

Assume you have a CIBIL score of 650 (sub-prime). To get to 800:

  • Month 1: Pay all dues on time. Pay down balances to <30% of limits.
  • Month 2: First monthly report. Score: 660–680.
  • Month 3–6: Continued on-time payments. Score: 700–730.
  • Month 7–12: Longer payment history accumulates. Score: 740–770.
  • Month 13–18: Stable low utilisation. Score: 780–800.

The 650 → 800 journey takes 12–18 months of disciplined behaviour. There's no shortcut.

The bottom line

The CIBIL score is one of the most consequential numbers in personal finance. It's not a verdict on your wealth; it's a probability of missed payment, calculated from a relatively small set of behaviours. Pay on time, keep utilisation low, don't churn applications, and don't close your oldest card. These four rules build a 750+ score in 12–18 months from scratch.

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