| Plan | Line of credit amount | Monthly fee | Other features |
| Basic plan | $750. | $5. |
|
| Premium plan | $2,500. | $25. |
|
| Ultimate plan | $3,500. | $35. |
|
How a Kikoff Credit Account line of credit works
How the Kikoff Credit Account can help your credit score
Kikoff fees and penalties
Other Kikoff credit-building tools
- Secured credit card: Kikoff offers a secured credit card “that works like a checking account and debit card.” You deposit $50 or more upfront, and your deposit then equals the credit limit of the card. Payments are reported to all three credit bureaus. You’ll need the Premium or Ultimate plan to get the secured credit card.
- Rent reporting: Kikoff will report your rent payments to Equifax if you link the bank account you use to make rent payments, provide a valid lease and submit landlord information. The service is included with all three plans.For a onetime $50 fee, you can get rent payments over the past 24 months reported.
- Bill reporting: If you choose the Premium or Ultimate plan, Kikoff will report your phone and utility payments to TransUnion each month.
- Debt negotiation: Premium and Ultimate plan users get access to Kikoff’s AI-powered debt negotiation tool, which can make offers to creditors and collectors to settle debt for less than you owe. There’s no guarantee the offer will be accepted, and settling debt typically hurts your credit score.
Kikoff vs. Self
Credit Account
- Offered by Kikoff; no similar product from Self.
- $750, $2,500 or $3,500 lines of credit.
- $5, $20 or $35 monthly charge, no interest.
- No credit check.
- Reporting: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
- Spending is limited to the Kikoff Store products.
Credit-builder loan
- Offered by Self; no similar product available from Kikoff.
- Loan amounts of $600, $840, $1,152 or $3,600.
- APRs around 15% (see the Self website for current pricing).
- No hard credit check that might affect your score.
- Reports to Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
- Loan term: 2 years.
- Free payments by bank transfer; variable fee to pay by debit card.
Secured credit cards
- $50 minimum deposit to have the account reported to credit bureaus.
- No hard credit check.
- No interest or annual fee.
- Reports to Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
- Fee-free access to funds at more than 55,000 Allpoint ATMs worldwide; $2.50 fee outside of the Allpoints network (in addition to any ATM fees).
- $100 minimum deposit.
- No hard credit check.
- 27.49% Variable APR; $0 intro fee first year, $25 annual fee thereafter.
- Reports to Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
- Cannot be used as a debit card at ATMs.
Rent reporting
- Included with Basic, Premium and Ultimate plans.
- Reports on-time payments to Equifax each month.
- Requires you to link the bank account you use to pay rent and provide your lease and landlord information.
- Reports up to two years’ worth of prior rent payments for a onetime $50 fee.
- Offers free rent reporting service.
- Reports on-time payments to all three credit bureaus each month.
- Requires you to link the bank account you use to pay rent.
- Reports up to two years’ worth of prior rent payments for onetime $49.95 fee.
Other ways to build credit
- Become an authorized user: If you have a family member or friend with a high credit score and long credit history, ask them to add you as an authorized user on their credit card.
- Ask someone to co-sign a loan for you: You may be able to get a loan with a co-signer who has good credit. A co-signer doesn’t have access to loan funds, but they agree to be legally responsible if you miss payments. Someone who co-signs for you is putting their credit at risk, so think carefully about your ability to repay the loan.
- Apply for a secured loan: Some lenders offer secured loans if you put up collateral, like a savings account or car. Getting a secured loan can help you get better loan terms, but the lender can seize your collateral if you don’t make payments.
- Credit-builder products from other financial institutions: Some banks, credit unions and online lenders offer secured credit cards, and several allow you to switch to an unsecured card after a minimum number of on-time payments. You can find credit-builder loans elsewhere, but they’re most common at credit unions and community banks. You can also explore using services like Experian Boost or a rent-reporting company to get your bills counted toward your scores.









