Removing Inaccurate Information on Your Credit Report – Wimgo

Removing Inaccurate Information on Your Credit Report

Have you ever checked your credit report and found mistakes or errors that don’t belong to you? That used to happen to me all the time. I’d pull my credit reports and see late payments for accounts I never had or addresses I never lived at. It was so frustrating!

I learned the hard way that having inaccurate information on your credit reports can totally tank your credit score. My score dropped over 100 points because of someone else’s delinquent accounts showing up on my report. I got denied for a car loan I needed even though I had a steady job. The dealer said it was because of my low credit score.

If you’ve dealt with credit report errors before, you know how much it can hurt your finances. The good news is you have the power to dispute inaccurate items and get them fixed or removed. Federal law gives you that right under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Credit bureaus and lenders have to investigate any errors you report to them.

I had to be really persistent and send multiple dispute letters, but I eventually got all those false accounts deleted. My credit score rebounded, and I qualified for way better rates. So don’t lose hope if your first disputes don’t solve everything. You just have to stick with the process.

This post will explain why credit report accuracy really matters, how the credit reporting system works, where to find errors on your reports, and step-by-step strategies for disputing mistakes successfully. I’ll also give tips on rebuilding credit after you clean up your reports. Let’s get started!

Why You Should Care About Credit Report Errors

You might think small mistakes on your credit reports are no big deal. But even minor inaccuracies can negatively impact your finances in key areas:

Your Credit Score

Incorrect or outdated information drags down your credit score. Every mistake you fix can bump up your credit score several points. A 100+ point increase is possible after major credit report disputes. The higher your score, the better your loan rates and approvals odds.

Getting Approved for Credit  

Lenders check your credit reports and scores when making decisions about whether to approve you for credit cards, auto loans, mortgages, and other lending products. Inaccurate negative items make lenders see you as riskier and less creditworthy. Fixing errors improves your chances of getting approved on favorable terms.

Background Checks

Many employers and landlords will pull your credit reports to screen you as an applicant. You could get passed over for having uncorrected errors that reflect poorly on your financial responsibility.

Employment  

Employers often use credit checks to assess job candidates, especially for positions involving financial responsibility. Mistakes that hurt your credit score could cost you a job or promotion.

Insurance Rates

Insurers charge higher premiums to consumers with lower credit scores. Removing credit report errors can lower your car and home insurance rates.

How Credit Reporting Works

To understand how to dispute credit report errors effectively, it helps to know how credit reporting works. 

The Three Major Credit Bureaus

The three nationwide credit bureaus – Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion – are private companies that maintain credit reports on more than 200 million Americans. Credit bureaus get their data from companies called “furnishers.”

Equifax

Founded in 1899, Equifax is the oldest and second-largest credit bureau with information on over 820 million consumers worldwide. Equifax also provides credit monitoring and identity theft protection services.

Experian  

Experian dates back to 1826 and has records on over 1.3 billion consumers globally. It operates in 44 countries including the US where it is the largest credit bureau. Experian offers additional services like marketing data and analytics.

TransUnion

TransUnion was established in 1968 and maintains credit data on over 1 billion consumers across 30 countries. In the US, TransUnion is the third largest credit bureau behind Experian and Equifax.

Data Furnishers

Furnishers provide the credit account and payment data that appears in credit bureau reports. Major furnishers reporting payment information to the credit bureaus include:

– Lenders – Credit card companies, banks, mortgage lenders, auto lenders, online lenders

– Debt Collectors – Collection agencies reporting outstanding debts in collections  

– Government Entities – IRS, state/county tax authorities, child support agencies

– Utilities – Mobile phone, internet, cable, gas, electric companies

– Courts – Judgments, bankruptcies, wage garnishments, tax liens 

Furnishers electronically submit account updates to the credit bureaus whenever a change occurs, such as a missed payment or default. The bureaus store the updated information in your credit file.

Common Inaccuracies 

Since the credit bureaus receive data from thousands of different furnishers, it gets complex tracking all the account updates. Here are some common credit report errors to look for:

Errors in Personal Information

– Incorrect name, address, date of birth, or Social Security number

– Information belonging to another person mixed in  

– Outdated personal details from a previous address or name change

Accounts That Aren’t Yours

– Accounts resulting from identity theft or fraud

– Authorized user accounts incorrectly listed as primary owner

– Joint accounts showing up individually after divorce or separation

Incorrect Balance or Payment History 

– Account shown with the wrong credit limit or past due amount

– Payments marked late that were paid on time  

– Accounts still listed as past due after being brought current

– Closed accounts showing incorrect balance owed

Closed Accounts Listed as Open

– Account still appearing open long after closure

– Recent payoffs or charge-offs not yet updated as closed

Duplicate Accounts 

– Same account appearing multiple times  

– Previous version not updated to closed after account refinance or transfer

Disputing Inaccurate Information

Follow these essential steps to dispute incorrect items and clean up your credit reports.

Get Your Credit Reports  

You can get free credit reports from each bureau once per year at annualcreditreport.com. Review reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, since inaccuracies can appear in any of the three. 

Optional paid services like MyFICO can provide your reports and scores in one place for your convenience. Monitoring services also give you easy online access.

Review All Three Credit Reports Carefully 

Thoroughly check your reports line-by-line for any suspicious, negative, outdated or incorrect information. Compare account names, balances owed, payment statuses, open dates, and other details across the three bureau reports for consistency.

Note any Inaccurate or Suspicious Items

If you spot any accounts, addresses, or public records that are unfamiliar, do not belong to you, show the wrong information, or indicate fraud, make note of them. Highlight items directly within the online reports or print and circle them on paper reports.

Dispute Errors with the Credit Bureaus

Each of the three major credit bureaus allows you to file disputes online, by phone, or by mail. Provide details on what information is inaccurate with supporting documents. The bureaus must investigate within 30 days.

– Equifax – Equifax.com/personal/disputes

– Experian – Experian.com/disputes  

– TransUnion – TransUnion.com/credit-disputes

Dispute Errors with Furnishers

Also contact any furnishers reporting incorrect data. Get furnisher dispute addresses from annualcreditreport.com or the credit bureaus. Explain the mistake and include copies of documents like account statements or payment receipts.

Provide Supporting Documentation

Include copies of any documents that prove the information is inaccurate when sending dispute letters. For identity theft, submit the police report and FTC affidavit. Send account statements showing correct balances or payment statuses. 

Follow Up on Your Disputes

After submitting disputes, follow up with the credit bureaus and furnishers to ensure the inaccurate items get updated or removed. Getting errors fixed can take persistence over several dispute cycles.

Strategies for Effective Disputes

Use these key strategies to improve your odds of successfully repairing credit report mistakes:

Dispute Online, by Mail, or Both 

Most credit bureaus now allow online dispute filing through their websites or apps. This offers a faster and easier process than mailing letters. However, written disputes sent via certified mail provide dated paper trails. Consider doing both for extra documentation. 

Keep Copies of Your Dispute Letters

Retain hard or digital copies of every credit dispute letter you send. Also save return certified mail receipts. This provides proof if any bureaus or furnishers fail to respond properly within the legally mandated timeframes.

Be Persistent 

Fixing all your credit report errors likely will not happen from just one dispute attempt. Be prepared to start new disputes every 30 to 45 days until all inaccuracies get fully resolved. Persistence pays off!

Add a Consumer Statement  

If a dispute was unsuccessful, you can request to insert a 100-word statement explaining your side on your credit report. Note that lenders rarely consider these statements. Keep disputing to remove negative items completely.

Seek Help from Credit Counselors

Reputable nonprofit credit counseling agencies offer expert guidance on credit disputes at little or no cost. They can review your reports, identify errors, draft effective dispute letters, and counsel you throughout the process.

Contact Government Agencies for Assistance

You can file complaints concerning unresolved credit report disputes with the FTC and CFPB. Their investigators will contact the credit bureaus and furnishers on your behalf to push fix errors.

Results of Credit Report Disputes

Here’s what to expect from the dispute process and how the credit bureaus and furnishers respond:

Credit Bureau Investigation Process 

Once the credit bureaus receive your dispute, they have 30 days to conduct an investigation, typically starting with contacting the furnisher that reported the disputed information. The furnisher will review and respond with confirmation, additional evidence, or correction of the data.

Outcomes

There are several possible outcomes from credit bureau investigations into your disputed items:

– Removal – If the furnisher cannot verify the information, finds an error, or fails to respond, the credit bureau must remove the disputed item. This is the best result.

– Verification – The furnisher confirms the disputed information is accurate with supporting evidence. In this case, the negative item remains on your credit reports.

– Update or Correction – The furnisher sends revised or corrected data to update your credit file, such as showing a debt paid or account now closed.

Timeline 

The credit reporting dispute process follows important time limits:

– 30 Days for Investigation – Credit bureaus must complete investigations within 30 days of receiving your dispute letter.

– 45 Days for Correction – Any corrections to your credit file must be made within 45 days. Removal of inaccurate items or updates from furnishers should appear on your next credit reports.

Fixing Special Credit Report Problems

Certain negative credit situations like identity theft and bankruptcy require specialized dispute processes:

Identity Theft

If errors stem from identity theft, take these steps:

– Get an Extended Fraud Alert – Request initial 90-day fraud alerts with the credit bureaus to block new accounts. Extend this to 7 years.

– File an ID Theft Report – Submit an FTC identity theft affidavit and police report to the credit bureaus. This requires them to block fraudulent accounts.

– Close Compromised Accounts – Contact every creditor to close any accounts opened fraudulently. Follow up with dispute letters. 

Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy disputes involve ensuring discharged debts no longer show as active collections or late payments.

– Dispute Old Accounts – Accounts included in your bankruptcy filing should be updated to show as discharged with a $0 balance owed.

– Ensure Proper Reporting – Chapter 7 or 13 bankruptcy status should say “discharged” with the filing date and district. Accounts cannot list late payments after your filing date.

Collections

Collections often originate from inaccurate underlying debts. Handle these two ways:

– Dispute Directly with Collector – Send validation letters requesting complete payment history details. Challenge debts older than the statute of limitations.

– Validate Debts – Ask collectors to confirm you actually owe the debt and it’s within the statute of limitations period for suing.

– Negotiate Pay-for-Delete – Offer to pay all or some of a valid debt in exchange for its complete removal from your credit reports by the collection agency. Get this agreement in writing first.

Judgments

Judgments should fall off your report within seven years, or earlier if paid.

– Dispute Errors – If a judgment is not yours, resulted from identity theft, or shows the wrong amount owed, start disputes. 

– Negotiate Settlement – You may be able to settle a valid judgment by paying less than the full amount owed. Get written confirmation it will be marked satisfied.

– Request Satisfaction – As soon as a judgment is fully paid, file evidence of payment and request the court file a satisfaction of judgment document with the credit bureaus.

Rebuilding Credit After Disputes

Don’t stop work after resolving your credit report disputes. Rebuilding and protecting your credit should become ongoing priorities:

Continue Monitoring All Three Reports

Mistakes can creep back in, so check your Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion reports regularly. Consider signing up for credit monitoring to stay on top of any changes.

Focus on Positive Credit Factors

Now that your credit reports have been corrected, work on improving other key factors that determine your scores:

– Keep Utilization Low – Pay balances down to reduce credit usage percentages. 

– Make On-Time Payments – Pay all bills by every due date over the next year to rebuild payment history. Set up autopay when possible.

– Limit New Credit – Avoid opening multiple new accounts after dispute success. Too many inquiries and new accounts can weigh down credit scores.

Be Patient

Don’t expect your scores to soar overnight. The positive effects of error removals can take several months to fully boost your credit scores as the changes age on your credit files. Let the process work.

Consider Credit Repair Agencies

If disputing on your own seems too complex, a reputable credit repair company can manage the process for you. Research companies carefully before engaging their services.

Conclusion

Errors on your credit reports can unfairly reduce your credit score and jeopardize your finances. If you spot any inaccurate information, be sure to dispute it promptly with credit bureaus and furnishers. Pay close attention to the dispute response timeframes and follow up until resolved. With perseverance, you can repair credit report mistakes and achieve your optimal credit profile and scores.