this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2025
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It's kind of similar in the US, negative things are gone 7 years later, regardless of whether they were resolved.
I'm seeing about 20% of homeowners having mortgages in Estonia, I wouldn't call 1 in 5 a lot. It's more like 60% in the US.
Also reading up on this, it looks like some post Soviet-era policies gave a lot of people the ability to buy their homes outright for a fraction of the cost in the 90s, so it seems a lot of what you're saying is the result of inertia from that. From what I read, it also seems Estonians are more likely than Americans to 'live within their means' as well, being much more averse in general to going into debt. That's definitely going to contribute to that low delinquency rate.
This all sounds pretty similar to how it is in the US.
This is also true in the US.
Overall, from what I'm seeing, I don't think any of the significant differences you've mentioned between Estonia and the US can be chalked up to how our credit score system works versus how it is there—you honestly describe a very similar system, and there are much more obvious reasons for the differences that I saw in the bit of research I did.
The major difference is that you don't need to be building credit history to own a home. How do you get a mortgage in the US if you've never had ANY credit before?
You could have googled this in less time than it took you to ask the question.
https://www.experian.com/blogs/ask-experian/can-you-get-a-mortgage-with-no-credit/
That sounds hella invasive. The banks get nowhere near as much info here unless you use a bank you already have an account in, in which case they have access to that account's information. Otherwise standard is 6 months of data.