Credit Repair Sydney

I’m 22 and had a credit score just over 800 a few months ago. Out of curiosity, I decided to explore the idea of getting a home loan nothing serious, just wanted to see if I’d qualify and what the numbers might look like.

I ended up submitting a few “pre-applications” with different banks, thinking they were just soft checks. Turns out they weren’t, and today I found out my credit score has dropped all the way down to 480.

I honestly had no idea that doing this could hurt my score so badly. I’ve always paid my bills on time, never had a credit card or loan, and I’m currently earning six figures so this came as a shock.

Is there anything I can do to repair my score? Or do I just have to wait it out for a few years and let it recover on its own?
 
Ah mate you’ve just learned the hard way what we all do eventually—banks love to say pre-approval when they really mean full-on hard inquiry. I’m Aussie too and unfortunately even here in Sydney, multiple hard pulls in a short period tank your score. Good news is: it's recoverable. Bad news: it won’t be overnight. Try to avoid any new credit applications for 6-12 months and maybe consider getting a low-limit credit card to show active positive behavior.
 
Dude SAME happened to me. I did a comparison check online, clicked on three lenders thinking just quotes, and bam score nosedived. It’s so misleading. You’d think we’d be warned better. It sucks that the system punishes curiosity. Now I only use actual brokers who can do soft checks or simulate rates without touching credit. Definitely worth chatting to one.
 
First things first: get a copy of your full credit report from Equifax Australia or Experian. See who did the hard checks and when. If any of those were done without proper consent, you might be able to dispute them. Also, start building good history secured cards, small personal loans with fast payoff. Credit repair here is mostly about time, but good behavior accelerates the rebound.
 
I hate how financial literacy is so gatekept. You could be responsible, high-income, never miss a payment and one misstep tanks you. The credit scoring system doesn’t reward curiosity; it punishes it. I say talk to a financial counselor who understands Australian credit systems. You don’t need to wait years but you will need 12+ months of no mistakes.
 
Honestly, this is why I’m team cash. No score to mess with. No tracking. I know it’s not realistic for buying a house but the whole system is broken. It’s wild that you lost over 300 points just for peeking behind the curtain. Fix? Time, consistency, and unfortunately, some patience.
 
My partner had almost the exact thing happen. He had a flawless record but didn’t know that rate shopping needs to be done within a tight window usually 14–30 days to count as one inquiry. Outside that? Every check dings you. We cleaned it up over 18 months with a secured credit card and one small personal loan we paid off in 3 months. You got this!
 
Hey i work in lending here in NSW. You’re not alone this happens often especially to first-time borrowers. You should know that Aussie banks often do full credit pulls even when labeled as conditional or quote only. A mortgage broker might’ve avoided this. Best move now is to show stability: no new credit, regular bill payments, and maybe even adding a small credit card you pay in full each month.
 
Honestly this is why i never mess with bank pre-approvals unless I’m ready to buy. They act like it’s no biggie but multiple hard inquiries are brutal. You're young and earning good money your profile will bounce back if you treat your credit like a fragile bird for the next year. Get a free report, don’t panic and don’t touch anything else with the word pre- in it for a while
 
You're lucky this happened now and not mid-house purchase. Imagine getting a score hit mid-offer. As painful as it is, this is a good opportunity to build some credit depth right now your file is thin. No credit cards or loans means no track record. Time to get a low-limit card, use it lightly, and pay it off monthly. Credit repair in Australia is a marathon, not a sprint.
 
Wait so you never had a credit card, and your score was 800+? That’s honestly wild. Usually Aussie scores reward active usage. Anyway yeah multiple hard pulls in a short timeframe are seen as risk signals. I’d say don’t panic too much. It’ll bounce back as long as nothing else hits your file. Just don’t apply for anything for a year.
 
Same thing happened to my cousin—except she applied to like 7 lenders ......Credit score dropped like a rock. But she got a secured card, put Spotify and Netflix on it, paid it off monthly, and within 9 months her score was up 150 points. It takes discipline, but you can bounce back faster than you think. Just stop poking it for now!
 
Honestly the credit scoring system seems designed to punish curiosity. You weren’t irresponsible; you were inquisitive. But now the algorithm thinks you’re desperate or shopping aggressively. I’d take a breather keep doing everything else right, and maybe consider opening one low-risk credit product to build consistency.
 
in Australia, not all lenders report to all bureaus. If you're planning on getting a credit builder card, make sure the bank reports to all three agencies (Equifax, Experian, and illion). Otherwise, your effort might not help your full score. Westpac and NAB tend to report pretty broadly.
 
This sounds so rough but don’t lose hope. The first thing is to figure out how many hard inquiries you have. They stay on your report for 5 years here but stop affecting your score after about 12 months. Also, since you’ve never had any revolving credit, your file might be a bit thin. Maybe it’s time to introduce one or two lines and use them carefully?
 
Ah yes, pre-approval the catfish of finance. Looks nice, seems harmless, and then bam, you’re ghosted by your credit score. You’ll recover mate. But next time, go to a broker instead they can run actual soft checks and pull rates without nuking your file
 
I get the pain. Sydney property’s already brutal without your credit turning on you. The system’s flawed how is a young high-income guy with no debt considered risky? You’ll be fine. Just keep everything super stable for the next 6–12 months and the score will climb back up.
 
You sound like a dream borrower.......high income, zero bad behavior. I’d guess the drop is mostly due to credit shopping red flags. Lenders hate when you look around too much. Irony? That’s called being a smart consumer. Anyway, give it a year, stay clean, and maybe even toss in a credit card to show usage.
 
The pre-app trap got me too, mate. Honestly, it's borderline deceptive. You think you're being responsible, checking options, and the system punishes you for not blindly applying to one bank. Anyway time will heal. Just don’t touch your score again for a while.
 
Your story’s why we need better financial education in schools. No one teaches how sensitive credit scores can be. You didn’t do anything wrong, technically you just didn’t know. The good news? You’re not in real debt, you’ve got income, and you’ve caught it early.
 
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