Boost Score Now is a credit repair and tradeline services company based in Oceanside, California, founded by Devin M. Davis, a US Marine veteran and self-described finance expert. The company operates from Suite 106 at 1930 South Coast Highway and markets itself as offering "the fastest credit repair in the industry." Davis positions himself as an entrepreneur with experience in financial services and business coaching, claiming years of study in finance, credit, and business matters.
The company's primary service offerings include: (1) aggressive credit repair that targets negative items on credit reports over a 90-day period, (2) purchase of seasoned authorized user tradelines with perfect payment history and low utilization (under 30%) to boost credit scores through piggybacking, (3) hard inquiry removal services, and (4) free credit report analysis. They also offer a free e-book titled "Secret Lenders List" that claims to reveal which credit bureaus specific credit card companies and banks pull from. Contact is available via phone (760-224-6900), text (CREDIT to the same number), or email (devin@boostscorenow.com).
What distinguishes Boost Score Now is their emphasis on tradeline purchasing—a controversial practice of adding consumers as authorized users on established credit accounts to artificially boost scores—combined with aggressive dispute-based credit repair. They claim to have "deleted over 1000's of negative items" and emphasize speed of service. The company operates extended hours (9am-5pm) and offers direct contact with the owner.
The company includes a legal disclaimer that they "do not guarantee certain score by law," which is important given the nature of credit repair claims. The website content focuses heavily on marketing promises rather than detailed service explanations, transparent pricing, or client testimonials. Tradeline purchasing remains a legally gray and ethically debated practice; while adding authorized users is technically legal, purchasing tradelines specifically for credit boost purposes is scrutinized by regulators.