Average national credit score fell when severe delinquencies increased in February 2025.
The average U.S. credit score slipped nationwide, largely due to the resumption of federal student loan delinquency reporting on U.S. consumers’ credit reports, according to FICO.
The scoring agency reported that the national average U.S. FICO score – used as a benchmark for assessing consumer credit risk – fell to 715, marking a one-point drop from January and a two-point decline from April 2024.
FICO scores, which range from 300 to 850, fluctuate based on updates to borrower behavior that is tracked by the three major U.S. consumer reporting agencies: Equifax, TransUnion and Experian. These scores are used by banks and lenders to see who they can safely lend money to.
FICO regularly publishes the national average score, offering key insight into the state of consumer credit.
According to FICO, federal student loan delinquencies were once again reported on credit files as of February 2025, following the emergency multi-year pause on federal student loan interest and payments under the CARES Act and a one-year "on-ramp" grace period by the Department of Education, which protected federal borrowers from the significant consequences of not making their student loan payments.
The share of consumers with a more than 90-day delinquency in the past six months increased from 7.4% in January to 8.3% in February. That is the first time this figure has surpassed pre-pandemic levels. In January 2020, it was 8.1%, according to FICO.