629 Credit Score: Is it Good or Bad?
Your score falls within the range of scores, from 580 to 669, considered Fair. A 629 FICO® ScoreΘ is below the average credit score.
Some lenders see consumers with scores in the Fair range as having unfavorable credit, and may decline their credit applications. Other lenders that specialize in "subprime" lending, are happy to work with consumers whose scores fall in the Fair range, but they charge relatively high interest rates and fees.
17% of all consumers have Scores in the Fair range (580-669).

Approximately 27% of consumers with credit scores in the Fair range are likely to become seriously delinquent in the future.
How to improve your 629 Credit Score
Think of your FICO® Score of 629 as a springboard to higher scores. Raising your credit score is a gradual process, but it's one you can begin right away.
80% of U.S. consumers' FICO® Scores are higher than 629.
You share a 629 FICO® Score with tens of thousands of other Americans, but none of them has that score for quite the same reasons you do. For insights into the specific causes of your score, and ideas on how to improve it, get copies of your credit reports and check your FICO® Score. Included with the score, you will find score-improvement suggestions based on your unique credit history. If you use those guidelines to adopt better credit habits, your score may begin to increase, bringing better credit opportunities.
From Fair to anywhere: Raising your credit score
A FICO® Score in the Fair range typically reflects credit-management problems or mistakes, such as multiple instances of payments that were missed or paid 30 days late. Consumers with more significant blots on their credit reports, such as foreclosures or bankruptcies, may also see their FICO® Scores rise from the Very Poor range (300-579) into the Fair range once several years have passed after those events.
The credit reports of 87% of Americans with a FICO® Score of 629 include late payments of 30 days past due.
If you examine your credit report and the report that accompanies your FICO® Score, you can probably identify the events that lowered your score. As time passes, those events' negative impact on your credit score will diminish. If you're patient, avoid repeating past mistakes, and take steps that can help build up your credit, your credit scores will likely begin to increase.
Past deeds (and misdeeds) feed your credit score
Credit-scoring systems such as FICO