Friday, January 28, 2022

The Easiest Way to Remove Bad Items from Your Credit Report

Did you know that it's possible to remove bad items from your credit report? Any inaccurate item showing up on your credit report that's damaging your credit can be removed, otherwise you have the right to sue the credit agency. 

Here's how to remove bad items from your credit report. 

1. Get a Report from All Three Agencies 

The first step is to get a credit report from all three credit reporting agencies. You can get your report once a year for free from annualcreditreport.com

Look through each and every one of your accounts carefully. Is there anything you don't recognize? Anything that's overstated or understated? 

Highlight any suspicious accounts. Note the account numbers and descriptions. 

Some bad items will appear on just one agency's report, while other errors will appear on all your credit reports. 

2, Beginning the Dispute Process 

Look for the dispute address of the credit agency you want to contact. It's usually on their website. Also look at their expected response times and policies for removing items. 

The FCRA states that they must respond within 30 days. If you don't get a response within 30 days, you may be eligible for a lawsuit and the item has to be removed from your credit file. 

Your dispute letter must illustrate exactly why you believe the account is erroneous and it also needs to list the exact account number(s) as it/they appear(s) on the credit report including the account description listed on the report.

MyCreditSystem gives you full access to a DYI Credit Repair / Credit Literacy Program including precise credit dispute letters and instructions for each case scenario to dispute credit report errors and/or remove collections, charge offs, medical collections, bankruptcy, repos, foreclosure, evictions and even student loans,

Be sure to be very clear about what you want them to do. For example, if the account exists but isn't actually delinquent, let them know that you want them to update the status to "Never Delinquent" rather than to remove the item because your credit history can be adversely affected by removing long standing accounts you have paid but have been late on.

3. The Next Steps  

One of three things will happen once you've sent in your dispute letter: 

  • They respond and remove the item. In this case, no further action needs to be taken. 
  • They respond and say that the item is not an error. They need to also provide documentation stating why this is the case, including the actual credit filing by the creditor.  

Look over the filing. Was this account opened by you? If not, you may have an identity theft and credit fraud issue on your hands. If it was, but is being incorrectly reported, you need to contact the creditor directly to work out the issue. 

  • If they don't respond. In this case, you have certain rights, including at times the right to have the items removed or the right to a lawsuit. Consult a lawyer for specific rights in this case or use MyCreditSystem to save thousands of dollars and repair your own credit legally.

The whole process of disputing a report item should take no more than three hours each. Those three hours could result in your ability to open credit cards, your ability to buy a home or your ability to buy a car at much better rates. The choice is yours. Can you rely on someone else to do this for you immediately or are you going to take control of your credit repair timeline. 

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