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Under
the Fair Credit Reporting Act "FCRA", both the credit reporting
company and the information provider (the person,
company, or organization that provides information about you to
a credit reporting company) are responsible for correcting
inaccurate or incomplete information in your report. To take
advantage of all your rights under this law, contact the credit
reporting company and the information provider.
Also Read
Your Credit - The Understanding of
denial
Credit and
Your Consumer Rights
How to Correct Errors On Your
Report Step One
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Tell the credit reporting
company, in writing, what information you think is inaccurate.
Include copies (NOT originals) of documents that support your
position. In addition to providing your complete name and
address, your letter should clearly identify each item in your
report you dispute, state the facts and explain why you dispute
the information, and request that it be removed or corrected.
You may want to enclose a copy of your report with the items in
question circled.
Your letter may look something like the one below.
Send your letter by certified mail, “return receipt requested,”
so you can document what the credit reporting company received.
Keep copies of your dispute letter and enclosures.
Credit reporting companies must investigate
the items in question — usually within 30 days — unless they
consider your dispute frivolous. They also must forward all the
relevant data you provide about the inaccuracy to the
organization that provided the information. After the
information provider receives notice of a dispute from the
credit reporting company, it must investigate, review the
relevant information, and report the results back to the credit
reporting company. If the information provider finds the
disputed information is inaccurate, it must notify all three
nationwide credit reporting companies so they can correct the
information in your file.
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If You Can
Not Do This Your Self
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There
are a few companies that will help
you correct credit errors on your
report for a small fee, but it is
better than having to deal with the
stress of doing it on your own. |
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Lexington Law
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Ovation Law
CreditAgenda
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When the investigation is complete, the credit reporting company
must give you the results in writing and a free copy of your
report if the dispute results in a change. This free report does
not count as your annual free report. If an item is changed or
deleted, the credit reporting company cannot put the disputed
information back in your file unless the information provider
verifies that it is accurate and complete. The credit reporting
company also must send you written notice that includes the
name, address, and phone number of the information provider.
If you ask, the credit reporting company must send notices of
any corrections to anyone who received your report in the past
six months. You can have a corrected copy of your report sent to
anyone who received a copy during the past two years for
employment purposes.
If an investigation doesn’t resolve your dispute with the credit
reporting company, you can ask that a statement of the dispute
be included in your file and in future reports. You also can ask
the credit reporting company to provide your statement to anyone
who received a copy of your report in the recent past. You can
expect to pay a fee for this service.
How to Correct Errors On Your
Report Step Two
-
Tell the creditor or other
information provider, in writing, that you dispute an item. Be
sure to include copies (NOT originals) of documents that support
your position. Many providers specify an address for disputes.
If the provider reports the item to a credit reporting company,
it must include a notice of your dispute. And if you are correct
— that is, if the information is found to be inaccurate — the
information provider may not report it again.
Adding Accounts to Your File
Your credit
file may not reflect all your credit accounts. Although most
national department store and all-purpose bank credit card
accounts will be included in your file, not all creditors supply
information to credit reporting companies: some local retailers,
credit unions, travel, entertainment, and gasoline card
companies are among the creditors that don’t.
If you’ve been told that you were denied
credit because of an “insufficient credit file” or “no credit
file” and you have accounts with creditors that don’t appear in
your credit file, ask the credit reporting companies to add this
information to future reports. Although they are not required to
do so, many credit reporting companies will add verifiable
accounts for a fee. However, understand that if these creditors
do not report to the credit reporting company on a regular
basis, the added items will not be updated in your file.
When negative information in your report is accurate, only the
passage of time can assure its removal. A credit reporting
company can report most accurate negative information for seven
years and bankruptcy information for 10 years. Information about
an unpaid judgment against you can be reported for seven years
or until the statute of limitations runs out, whichever is
longer. There is no time limit on reporting: information about
criminal convictions; information reported in response to your
application for a job that pays more than $75,000 a year; and
information reported because you’ve applied for more than
$150,000 worth of credit or life insurance. There is a standard
method for calculating the seven-year reporting period.
Generally, the period runs from the date that the event took
place.
Sample Dispute Letter
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Date
Your Name
Your Address, City, State, Zip Code
Complaint Department
Name of Company
Address
City, State, Zip Code
Dear Sir or Madam:
I am writing to dispute the following information in my
file. I have circled the items I dispute on the attached
copy of the report I received.
This item (fill in as needed- identify item(s) disputed by name of source,
such as creditors or tax court, and identify type of
item, such as credit account, judgment, etc.) is
(inaccurate or incomplete) because (describe what is
inaccurate or incomplete and why). I am requesting that
the item be removed (or request another specific change)
to correct the information.
Enclosed are copies of (use this sentence if applicable
and describe any enclosed documentation, such as payment
records and court documents) supporting my position.
Please reinvestigate this (these) matter(s) and (delete
or correct) the disputed item(s) as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Your name
Enclosures: (List what you are enclosing.) |
Fair Credit Reporting Act as Amended
(.pdf)
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Section
615(h) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) generally
requires a user of consumer reports, such as a financial
institution, to provide a risk-based pricing notice to a
consumer when the financial institution, based on a
consumer report, extends credit to the consumer on terms
that are “materially less favorable” than the terms it
extends to other consumers. On January 15, 2010, the
Federal Reserve and the Federal Trade Commission
published final rules (75 FR 2724) implementing this
section of the FCRA. The rules are effective on January
1, 2011.
The risk-based pricing notice alerts consumers to the
existence of negative information in their consumer
reports so that they may check their consumer reports
for accuracy. This requirement complements another
provision of the FCRA, Section 615(a), which requires
creditors to provide an adverse action notice when they
deny a consumer’s application for credit, based in whole
or in part on information in a consumer’s report. The
new provision, Section 615(h), covers situations where
the creditor does not deny credit, but offers it at
“materially less favorable terms” or increases the APR
after reviewing the consumer’s account based on a
consumer report.
A creditor must also provide the consumer with an
account review risk-based pricing notice if the
creditor, based on a consumer report, increases a
consumer’s APR after a review of the consumer’s account.
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Where To File Complaints
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FTC Complaint Assistant. So that we
can properly record your complaint, you will first be
asked to answer a series of questions. After answering
these questions, you will have the opportunity to
provide us additional details regarding your complaint
in your own words. Click on logo to file a complaint.
Before You Submit a
Complaint
The Federal Trade Commission, the nation's consumer
protection agency, collects complaints about companies,
business practices, and identity theft.
Why: Your complaints can help us detect patterns of
wrong-doing, and lead to investigations and
prosecutions. The FTC enters all complaints it receives
into Consumer Sentinel, a secure online database that is
used by thousands of civil and criminal law enforcement
authorities worldwide. The FTC does not resolve
individual consumer complaints. |
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Consumer Sentinel Military helps to identify and target
consumer protection issues that affect members of the
United States Armed Forces and their families. Click
here
to file a consumer complaint if you are a member
of the United States Armed Forces. |
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econsumer.gov is a portal for you as a consumer to
report complaints about online and related transactions
with foreign companies. Click
here
to file a cross boarder complaint. |
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National Do Not Call Registry
The National Do Not Call Registry gives you a choice
about whether to receive telemarketing calls at home.
Most telemarketers should not call your number once it
has been on the registry for 31 days. If they do, you
can file a complaint at this Website. You can register
your home or mobile phone for free. |
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State Attorney General's |
allthatjazzz.com webpage
with links to where you should file complaint
information with your local State Attorney and their
consumer protection website. allthatjazzz.com has the
most complete information you will find on the web click
the link and find your state. |
To contact the three major credit
bureaus:
Other consumer protection links:
Buy The Survival
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