Key facts
- VantageScore 5.0, a new tri-bureau credit scoring model, has been released.
- The model is available through Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
- It is designed to improve creditworthiness assessment for unsecured loans and auto financing.
- VantageScore claims up to a 9% improvement in predictive performance compared to VantageScore 3.0.
- The model aims for score consistency across bureaus and over time.
VantageScore announced the launch of VantageScore 5.0, a new credit scoring model developed to enhance lenders' ability to evaluate consumer creditworthiness, particularly for unsecured loans and auto financing. This model is now accessible through Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, the three primary U.S. credit reporting agencies.
The new scoring system is built upon post-pandemic consumer credit data, which VantageScore states better reflects shifts in borrowing behaviors since 2020. The company asserts that VantageScore 5.0 offers up to a 9% improvement in predictive performance for unsecured lending products, such as credit cards, retail cards, personal loans, and auto loans, when compared to its predecessor, VantageScore 3.0.
VantageScore highlighted that VantageScore 5.0 features an innovative and simplified design intended to minimize credit score migration and maintain score consistency in a dynamic credit environment. It also aims to reduce score variability among the three credit bureaus, ensuring that approximately 96% of scores fall within a 40-point range across all agencies. The company emphasized that this model, optimized for unsecured and auto loans, is the only nationwide tri-bureau score trained on recent consumer loan performance data.
Additionally, the model incorporates new patent-pending credit attributes designed to offer lenders more granular insights into borrower risk. Andrada Pacheco, VantageScore’s executive vice president and chief data scientist, stated that VantageScore 5.0 represents a new generation of models built for current challenges and future opportunities in the evolving credit landscape. This release occurs amid heightened competition in the credit scoring market, with federal housing regulators recently expanding the use of newer models like VantageScore 4.0 and FICO 10T in mortgage lending.
