CREDIT REPAIR: SELF HELP MAY BE BEST
You see the
advertisements in newspapers, on TV, and on
the Internet. You hear them on the radio.
You get fliers in the mail. You may even get
calls from telemarketers offering credit
repair services. They all make the same
claims:
“Credit problems?
No problem!”
“We can erase your
bad credit — 100% guaranteed.”
“Create a new
credit identity — legally.”
“We can remove
bankruptcies, judgments, liens, and bad
loans from your credit file forever!”
Don’t believe these
statements. Only time, a conscious effort,
and a personal debt repayment plan will
improve your
credit report.
Everyday, Companies
nationwide appeal to consumers with poor
credit histories. They promise, for a fee,
to clean up your credit report so you can
get a car loan, a home mortgage, insurance,
or even a job. The truth is, they can’t
deliver. After you pay them hundreds or
thousands of dollars in fees, these
companies do nothing to improve your credit
report; most simply vanish with your money.
If you decide to
respond to a credit repair offer, look for
these tell-tale signs of a scam:
- Companies that want
you to pay for credit repair services before
they provide any services.
- Companies that do
not tell you your legal rights and what you
can do for yourself for free.
- Companies that
recommend that you not contact a credit
reporting company directly.
- Companies that
suggest that you try to invent a “new”
credit identity — and then, a new credit
report — by applying for an Employer
Identification Number to use instead of your
Social Security number.
- Companies that
advise you to dispute all information in
your credit report or take any action that
seems illegal, like creating a new credit
identity. If you follow illegal advice and
commit fraud, you may be subject to
prosecution.
Criminal
prosecution is possible if you use the mail
or telephone to apply for credit and provide
false information. It’s a federal crime to
lie on a loan or credit application, to
misrepresent your Social Security number,
and to obtain an Employer Identification
Number from the Internal Revenue Service
under false pretenses.
Under the Credit
Repair Organizations Act, credit repair
companies cannot require you to pay until
they have completed the services they have
promised.
No one can legally
remove accurate and timely negative
information from a
credit report. The law
allows you to ask for an investigation of
information in your file that you dispute as
inaccurate or incomplete. There is no charge
for this. Everything a credit repair clinic
can do for you legally, you can do for
yourself at little or no cost. According to
the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA):
You’re entitled to
a free report if a company takes adverse
action against you, like denying your
application for credit, insurance, or
employment, and you ask for your report
within 60 days of receiving notice of the
action. The notice will give you the name,
address, and phone number of the consumer
reporting company. You’re also entitled to
one free report a year if you’re unemployed
and plan to look for a job within 60 days;
if you’re on welfare; or if your report is
inaccurate because of fraud, including
identity theft.
Each of the
nationwide consumer reporting companies —
Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — is
required to provide you with a free copy of
your credit report, at your request, once
every 12 months.
The three companies
have set up a central website, a toll-free
telephone number, and a mailing address
through which you can order your free annual
report. To order, click on
www.annualcreditreport.com, call 1-877-322-8228,
or complete the Annual Credit Report Request
Form and mail it to: Annual Credit Report
Request Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta,
GA 30348-5281. You can print the form from
www.ftc.gov/credit. Do not contact the three
nationwide consumer reporting companies
individually. They are providing free annual
credit reports only through
www.annualcreditreport.com, 1-877-322-8228, and
Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O.
Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281. You may
order your reports from each of the three
nationwide consumer reporting companies at
the same time, or you can order your report
from each of the companies one at a time.
For more information, see Your Access to
Free Credit Reports at
www.ftc.gov/credit.
Otherwise, a
consumer reporting company may charge you up
to $9.50 for another copy of your report
within a 12-month period.
You can dispute
mistakes or outdated items for free. Under
the FCRA, both the consumer reporting
company and the information provider (that
is, the person, company, or organization
that provides information about you to a
consumer 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 consumer reporting company and
the information provider.
To repair your
credit, take the following steps:
1) Tell the
consumer 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 on Topic 6. Send your letter by
certified mail, “return receipt requested,”
so you can document what the consumer
reporting company received. Keep copies of
your dispute letter and enclosures.
Consumer 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 consumer
reporting company, it must investigate,
review the relevant information, and report
the results back to the consumer reporting
company. If the information provider finds
the disputed information is inaccurate, it
must notify all three nationwide consumer
reporting companies so they can correct the
information in your file.
When the
investigation is complete, the consumer
reporting company must give you the results
in writing and a free copy of your report if
the dispute results in a change. If an item
is changed or deleted, the consumer
reporting company cannot put the disputed
information back in your file unless the
information provider verifies that it is
accurate and complete. The consumer
reporting company also must send you written
notice that includes the name, address, and
phone number of the information provider.
If you request, the
consumer reporting company must send notices
of any correction 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
consumer 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 consumer 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.
2) 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 consumer 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.
For more
information, see How to Dispute Credit
Report Errors at
www.ftc.gov/credit.
Reporting
Accurate Negative Information
When negative
information in your report is accurate, only
the passage of time can assure its removal.
A consumer 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.
For more
information, see Building a Better Credit
Report at
www.ftc.gov/credit.
The Credit Repair
Organizations Act
By law, credit
repair organizations must give you a copy of
the “Consumer Credit File Rights Under State
and Federal Law” before you sign a contract.
They also must give you a written contract
that spells out your rights and obligations.
Read these documents before you sign
anything. The law contains specific
protections for you. For example, a credit
repair company cannot:
Make false claims about their services;
Charge you until
they have completed the promised services; or
Perform any
services until they have your signature on a
written contract and have completed a
three-day waiting period. During this time,
you can cancel the contract without paying
any fees.
Your contract must specify:
The payment terms
for services, including their total cost;
A detailed
description of the services to be performed;
How long it will
take to achieve the results;
Any guarantees they
offer; and
The company’s name
and business address.
Have You Been
Victimized?
Many states have
laws regulating credit repair companies.
State law enforcement officials may be
helpful if you’ve lost money to credit
repair scams.
If you’ve had a
problem with a credit repair company, don’t
be embarrassed to report it. While you may
fear that contacting the government will
only make your problems worse, remember that
laws are in place to protect you. Contact
your local consumer affairs office or your
state Attorney General (AGs). Many AGs have
toll-free consumer hotlines. Check the Blue
Topics of your telephone directory for the
phone number or check the National
Association of Attorneys General for a list
of state Attorneys General.
If you have poor
credit
Just because you
have a poor credit report doesn’t mean you
won’t be able to get credit. Creditors set
their own credit-granting standards and not
all of them look at your credit history the
same way. Some may look only at more recent
years to evaluate you for credit, and they
may grant credit if your bill-paying history
has improved. It may be worthwhile to
contact creditors informally to discuss
their credit standards.
If you’re not
disciplined enough to create a workable
budget and stick to it, work out a repayment
plan with your creditors, or keep track of
mounting bills, consider contacting a credit
counseling organization. Many credit
counseling organizations are nonprofit and
work with you to solve your financial
problems. But not all are reputable. For
example, just because an organization says
it’s “nonprofit,” there’s no guarantee that
its services are free, affordable, or even
legitimate. In fact, some credit counseling
organizations charge high fees, or hide
their fees by pressuring consumers to make
“voluntary” contributions that only cause
more debt.
Most credit
counselors offer services through local
offices, the Internet, or on the telephone.
If possible, find an organization that
offers in-person counseling. Many
universities, military bases, credit unions,
housing authorities, and branches of the
U.S. Cooperative Extension Service operate
nonprofit credit counseling programs. Your
financial institution, local consumer
protection agency, and friends and family
also may be good sources of information and
referrals.
Reputable credit
counseling organizations can advise you on
managing your money and debts, help you
develop a budget, and offer free educational
materials and workshops. Their counselors
are certified and trained in the areas of
consumer credit, money and debt management,
and budgeting. Counselors discuss your
entire financial situation with you, and
help you develop a personalized plan to
solve your money problems. An initial
counseling session typically lasts an hour,
with an offer of follow-up sessions.
For more
information, see Knee Deep in Debt and
Fiscal Fitness: Choosing a Credit Counselor
at
www.ftc.gov/credit.
Review your credit
report
Even if you don’t
have a poor credit history, some financial
advisers and consumer advocates suggest you
review your credit report periodically:
because the
information it contains affects whether you
can get a loan or insurance — and how much
you will have to pay for it.
to make sure the
information is accurate, complete, and
up-to-date before you apply for a loan for a
major purchase like a house or car, buy
insurance, or apply for a job.
to help guard
against identity theft. That’s when someone
uses your personal information — like your
name, your Social Security number, or your
credit card number — to commit fraud.
Identity thieves may use your information to
open a new credit card account in your name.
Then, when they don’t pay the bills, the
delinquent account is reported on your
credit report. Inaccurate information like
that could affect your ability to get
credit, insurance, or even a job.
Sample Dispute
Letter
|
Date
Your Name
Your Address
Your 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. The
items I dispute also are
encircled on the attached copy
of the report I received.
This item
(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 deleted (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, court
documents) supporting my
position. Please investigate
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)
|
The FTC works for
the consumer to prevent fraudulent,
deceptive and unfair business practices in
the marketplace and to provide information
to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid
them. To file a complaint or to get free
information on consumer issues, visit
The
Federal Trade Commission or call toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY:
1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet,
telemarketing, identity theft, and other
fraud-related complaints into Consumer
Sentinel, a secure, online database
available to hundreds of civil and criminal
law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and
abroad.