
By Gerri Detweiler
The information in your credit reports is what's used to create your credit scores, so you don't want to let mistakes on your credit reports potentially throw your credit scores out of whack. Here's how to dispute credit report mistakes, step-by-step:
Step One: Order current copies of your credit reports. Make sure you have fairly current copies (ideally, less than 60 days old) of your credit reports from all three major credit reporting agencies (CRAs), Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. Since these agencies don't share information with one another, you can't assume that the same mistakes -- or lack of them -- appear on all your reports.
Step Two: Dispute the mistake. Sounds straightforward, right? But you have a couple of choices to make here. The first is whether to dispute the item with the credit reporting agency (or agencies) whose report(s) shows the error, or with the company that is furnishing that information to the CRA (the "furnisher.")
- It's something not supplied by a furnisher that you can contact; for example, a wrong address, or incorrect public record information such as a judgment would require you to work with the CRA.
- The information reported doesn't belong to you.
- You have documentation that will show the furnisher that they are making a mistake in how they report the information to the credit reporting agencies; for example, copies of correspondence documenting a billing error.
- You've already disputed the item with the CRA and it has confirmed the information is "correct" and you want to go to the source.
- It doesn't fall neatly into one of the CRA's dispute categories. If you dispute it online, you'll likely have to choose a reason for the dispute from a menu that gives you a few standard choices. If you need to provide a more detailed explanation, a letter may be your best bet.
- You're giving up your rights online. Before you dispute a credit report mistake online, read the website terms and conditions to make sure you aren't agreeing to mandatory binding arbitration, which means you forfeit your right to have your day in court if it is not resolved.
- You have proof of your side of the story. If you have documentation that the information is wrong, you'll want to include it in your written dispute.
- This is your second attempt to get it right. If you received a response from the credit reporting agency that says the data is correct, but you know it's not, you may want to follow up with a letter.
Step Three: Wait for a response. The CRA or furnisher has 30 days to get back to you with a response. If the information is corrected or deleted, skip to step six. If not, go to the next step.
Step Four: Escalate your dispute. If you are told the information is correct, but you know it's wrong, you'll need to escalate your dispute. Send a letter to the CRA and/or furnisher stating why you believe the conclusion is wrong, and CC: the Better Business Bureau, your state attorney general and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Send copies of your dispute to those agencies.
Step Five: Talk with a consumer law attorney. If your attempts to fix the problem don't work, then you may want to talk with a consumer law attorney with experience in consumer credit disputes. The website of the National Association of Consumer Advocates is a good place to start.
Step Six: Keep records of your dispute. Put all your records of your dispute (copies if your credit reports, letters of correspondence, printed copies of emails or online responses, etc.) into a file and put it in a place where you can get to it if the same data appears on your file again.
Step Seven: Monitor your credit reports. At a minimum, order your credit reports from AnnualCreditReport.com, and use a credit monitoring tool (our Credit Report Card is free and is a good way to keep tabs on things). If you monitor your credit reports and scores closely, you'll be alerted quickly to any problems. Credit reporting agencies are not supposed to reinsert items that were deleted as the result of a dispute without notifying you first, but it can happen.
This article originally appeared on Credit.com. Gerri Detweiler is Credit.com's personal finance expert.