KEY POINTS
  • The average credit score sits at an all-time high, but has leveled off after improving year over year.
  • Higher credit scores pave the way to lower rates, potentially saving thousands of dollars in interest charges.
  • This map shows where Americans have the highest, and lowest, credit scores.

The national average credit score sits at an all-time high of 716, unchanged from a year ago, according to a report from FICO, developer of one of the scores most widely used by lenders.

However, this marks the first time since the Great Recession that scores did not improve year over year, the report found. That's in part due to a small uptick in missed payments, elevated consumer debt levels and an increase in the number of consumers opening new credit cards or new lines of credit.