Every time your credit gets checked, it lands in one of two buckets, and the difference is bigger than most people think. The soft vs hard credit inquiry distinction decides whether a check quietly disappears or shaves points off your score for months. Get it wrong and you can spook yourself out of checking your own credit — or blindside your score right before a mortgage application.
What changed in 2026
The mechanics have not been rewritten, but a few things around the edges have shifted:
- Prequalification is everywhere. Nearly every issuer now offers a "check your odds" tool that runs a soft pull. These are genuinely soft, but read the fine print — a few sneaky "prequalify" buttons still route you into a full application.
- Newer scoring models de-emphasize inquiries. The latest FICO and VantageScore versions weigh inquiries lightly and shorten their sting. Many lenders still run older models, so do not assume the impact is zero.
- BNPL and fintech checks vary. Buy-now-pay-later and instant-approval apps sometimes run a soft pull, sometimes a hard one. It is inconsistent, so confirm before you tap "apply."
The core difference
A soft inquiry (soft pull) happens when your credit is reviewed but not because you actively applied for new credit. It is visible only to you and never changes your score.
A hard inquiry (hard pull) happens when a lender checks your report because you asked for new credit — a card, loan, or line. It is visible to lenders and can lower your score slightly.
| Feature |
Soft inquiry |
Hard inquiry |
| Affects your score |
No |
Yes, usually a few points |
| Visible to lenders |
No |
Yes |
| Needs your permission |
Not always |
Yes |
| Stays on report |
Not shown to others |
About 2 years |
| Typical trigger |
Checking your own score, prequalified offers |
Applying for a card or loan |
What counts as a soft pull
These reviews are routine and harmless to your number:
- Checking your own credit score or report.
- Prequalified or preapproved card and loan offers.
- An existing lender periodically reviewing your account.
- Most background checks by employers or landlords.
- Insurance quotes in many states.
The honest caveat: a soft pull still creates a record you can see. If you are diagnosing why your score moved, ignore the soft inquiries — they are not the cause.
What counts as a hard pull
Hard inquiries show up when you formally apply for credit:
- New credit card, personal loan, auto loan, or mortgage applications.
- Requesting a credit limit increase (with some issuers).
- Renting when a landlord runs a full application (varies).
- Opening some utility or cell phone accounts.
Each hard pull typically costs a small, temporary number of points and lingers on your report for about two years, though the scoring impact usually fades within months. One or two is nothing to lose sleep over. A cluster in a short span makes lenders nervous, because it can signal someone scrambling for credit.
The rate-shopping exception worth knowing
Here is the rule that saves borrowers real money: when you shop for a single loan — mortgage, auto, or student — multiple hard inquiries within a short window are bundled and counted as one. Depending on the scoring model, that window runs roughly 14 to 45 days.
So quotes from five mortgage lenders in two weeks do not equal five dings — it is treated as one shopping event. The catch: this applies to like-for-like loans. A mortgage, a credit card, and an auto loan in the same week are three separate inquiries — different products, different buckets.
What to actually do about it
- Check your own credit freely. It is always a soft pull that changes nothing.
- Use prequalification before applying. Soft-pull tools help you avoid wasted hard inquiries on cards you would not get.
- Batch your rate shopping. Concentrate mortgage or auto quotes into a two-week window to trigger the single-inquiry rule.
- Space out card applications. Spreading new cards across months softens the cumulative effect and the drop in average account age.
What to skip: obsessing over a single hard inquiry. Payment history and credit utilization move your score far more than any one pull will. Verify current figures and windows yourself, since models and lender practices keep shifting.
FAQ
Does checking my own credit score hurt it?
No. Checking your own score or report is always a soft inquiry and has zero effect on your number, no matter how often you do it.
How many points does a hard inquiry cost?
Usually just a few, and the effect is temporary. Exact impact depends on your overall profile and which scoring model the lender uses.
Do prequalified offers count as hard inquiries?
No, genuine prequalification uses a soft pull. But watch out — a real application later, if you accept, triggers a hard pull.
How long do hard inquiries stay on my report?
About two years on the report, but their effect on your score typically fades within several months to a year, well before they drop off.
Where to go next
Inquiries are a small piece of a bigger money picture. If a hard pull came from opening a new card to move a balance, tackle the underlying balance with our guide on how to pay off credit card debt in 2026. To keep your credit healthy for the long haul, see how to prepare for retirement in 2026, and when you are ready to put savings to work, start with what is a brokerage account in 2026.