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Credit Repair Myths and Answers
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Common Myths of Credit Repair
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Click on the questions below for more information.
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When I pay off a past-due account, such as a charge off
or a collection account, will that repair my credit? |
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If I succeed in repairing a negative item, will it come
right back on my credit report? |
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Are there negative listings, such as bankruptcies and
foreclosures, that are impossible to repair? |
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I've heard that repairing the credit report is easy and
any consumer can do it himself for the price of a few postage stamps.
Is that true? |
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If I declare bankruptcy, will it repair my credit and can
I begin my credit report all over with a clean slate? |
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Can I file a "100-word statement" on my credit report
explaining my side of the story and will creditors read my statement
and consider my credit repaired? |
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By changing numbers in my social security number or by
using an EIN tax number, can I repair my credit and fool the credit
bureaus into creating a completely clean, new credit file under my name? |
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If I build enough good credit, will it offset my bad
credit and repair my credit? |
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If I'm having trouble paying my bills, can I go to
Consumer Credit Counseling Service and will they help me to repair my
credit? |
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Is it illegal for creditors to take a negative, accurate
listing off my credit report? They tell me that the law requires that
these items remain on the credit report for at least seven years and
that they won't repair my credit. |
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How hard is it to repair my own credit? |
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Credit Answers
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When I pay off
a past-due account, such as a charge off or a collection account, will
it show "paid" and no longer be considered negative?
It is quite difficult to repair
your credit without somehow satisfying your outstanding debts. However,
the act of paying off a debt will not improve your credit rating much,
if at all. Negative credit is allowed to stay on the credit report for
a maximum of seven and one half years, except for bankruptcy which may
remain on the credit report for ten years. Under the old Fair Credit
Reporting Act (FCRA), the seven year clock began ticking on "the date
of last activity" or, in other words, when the last action took place
on the account. Under the revised FCRA, the credit bureaus must start
the seven year clock on the first payment that you missed that led to
the collection or charge off status. Now, creditors and collection
agencies aren't allowed to extend the reporting period by passing the
account back and forth between agencies.
However, by paying an
outstanding, delinquent debt you will change the account status to
"paid collection," "paid was late," or "paid was charged off" - which
will still stand out as a very negative listing. When you have
outstanding debt, it is almost always prudent to seek professional help
so that you may settle your debts without further damaging your credit.
In some cases, it is even possible to negotiate the deletion of
negative credit as part of the payoff.
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If I
succeed in deleting a negative item, will it come right back on my
credit report?
The credit bureaus have
cleverly spread this myth through the news media and government
agencies to discourage credit repair. In truth, the credit bureaus will
sometimes temporarily delete a negative listing if they haven't heard
from the credit grantor after approximately thirty days. If the credit
grantor reports late, say after six weeks, and then verifies the
negative listing, the credit bureau will often reinsert the negative
listing on the credit report and reverse the credit repair. This is
often known as a "soft delete." Usually, though, the creditor simply
fails to respond and the negative listing is permanently deleted and
repaired. If the item is verified by the credit grantor, either before
thirty days or after, the account may still be repaired again at some
future time.
Under the new Fair Credit
Reporting Act (FCRA), the credit bureaus must follow strict procedures
to notify you if they decide to re-report an entry on your credit
report. These new procedures have reduced the frequency of the
re-reporting of listings, and they have increased the risk of lawsuit
for the credit bureaus when they do it.
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Are there
negative listings, such as bankruptcies and foreclosures, that are
impossible to remove from the credit report?
There is no type of negative
listing that hasn't been reparied and removed from a credit report
thousands of times. Negative items, such as bankruptcy or unpaid debts,
are certainly more difficult to repair and remove from the credit
report, but this has more to do with the operational systems of the
credit bureaus than with the severity of the bad credit item. For
example, judgments and tax liens are severely negative listings, yet
are, overall, easier to repair.
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I've heard
that disputing the credit report is easy and any person can do it
himself for the price of a few postage stamps. Is that true?
Disputing the credit report is
easy. Getting results (and actually repairing bad credit) is amazingly
difficult, complex, and infuriating. It isn't a coincidence that the
Federal Trade Commission receives more complaints against credit
bureaus than any other type of business. If you call the FTC today to
report a complaint about the credit bureaus, their phone mail system
will ask you if to press one if your complaint is about the credit
bureaus, and press another number if your complaint is about anything
else. Clearly, this situation evolved out of deep consumer frustration
with the uncooperative nature of the credit repair process.
Remember, the credit bureaus
are primarily interested in protecting their profits. Investigating
your challenge consumes these profits. Short of sparking a large number
of lawsuits, the credit bureaus seem to do everything in their power to
discourage consumers from making progress with their credit repair.
Repairing your own credit is like repairing your own transmission or
representing yourself in court; it is possible, but you must decide if
your are willing to take the time and assume the risks of doing it
yourself.
Unless you hire a professional
to help you, credit repair will have to become a full-fledged hobby.
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If I declare
bankruptcy, can I begin my credit report all over with a clean slate?
Many bankruptcy attorneys do
not adequately understand or explain the effects of bankruptcy to their
clients. Stated simply, bankruptcy is to the credit rating what the
atomic bomb is to the battlefield.
When you file for bankruptcy,
every credit account that you decide to include in bankruptcy will
become an "included in bankruptcy" item. Additionally, a bankruptcy
filing and bankruptcy discharge listing will appear in the court
records section of your credit report. Because so many negative items
are attached to the bankruptcy, it becomes very difficult to remove all
trace of the bad credit. If at all possible, you should avoid
bankruptcy.
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Can I file a "100'word
statement" on my credit report explaining my side of the story and will
creditors read my statement and take it into consideration?
No known creditor considers
information given in a 100-word statement. It makes one wonder why they
included this meaningless stipulation into the Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
Most creditors will not even
look at the credit report when a credit application is made. Rather,
they will simply take a numerical score from the credit report
and make a determination as to whether or not they should extend the
credit. This score does not take into consideration the contents of a
100-word statement.
The statement does, however,
verify that some of the negative listings on the credit report are
technically accurate. This just makes your credit repair job more
difficult. Make 100-word statements the first things you delete from
your credit file (if you ever added one in the first place.)
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By changing
numbers in my social security number or by using an EIN tax number, can
I fool the credit bureaus into creating a completely clean, new credit
file under my name?
Many credit repair operators
have promoted this scheme, known as "file segregation". Technically, we
have seen some few people that have succeeded in using a false Social
Security Number and have fooled the credit bureaus into giving them a
new identity. The scheme is complicated: one must change almost all
identifying information about oneself and be very careful never to use
the old information again. Most often, we've seen people embark on
these schemes only to slip and, at some time, provide the old
information mixed with the new. Then, both credit reports merge and the
consumer is left with a tangled mess of deception and suspicious credit
reports.
In the worst cases, people have
been charged with crimes, or terminated from jobs, for using the false
information.
This scheme has proven to be
complex, difficult, and (according to the FTC) illegal. Lying about any
personal information on a credit application is usually a federal
crime. Using these "file segregation" credit repair schemes requires an
enormous amount of coordination, not to mention personal risk.
Recently, the FTC has gone out
of its way to shut down any credit repair company that promotes
literature discussing file segregation. It remains to be seen if they
will be successful under the First Amendment.
If asked for our recommendation
as to whether a person should try a file segregation credit repair
program, our answer is always, "No, it is too risky, difficult and
legally problematic."
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If I
build enough good credit, will it offset my bad credit and make me
credit worthy?
Any amount of bad credit is
devastating to your chances of being approved by a credit grantor. Most
credit grantors never actually look at your credit report. A computer
pulls your credit report, rates your credit standing, income,
indebtedness, and stability, generates a number (or FICO score,) then
spits out an acceptance or denial. Even one or two slow pays will
usually trigger a credit card or personal loan denial. The slightest
amount of negative credit will cause the interest on an auto loan to
skyrocket. You will probably find that even a little bad credit,
regardless of how much good credit you have, is an unacceptable barrier
to credit approval.
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If I'm having
trouble paying my bills, can I go to Consumer Credit Counseling Service
and will they help me to repair my credit?
Consumer Credit Counseling
Service or CCCS is a nonprofit debt counseling service that assists
consumers who are over their heads in debt. CCCS is funded and
controlled by the credit grantors and the credit bureaus.
Often, CCCS provides a
beneficial service to the consumer. Because of the obvious allegiance
between CCCS and the credit bureaus, you cannot reasonably expect CCCS
to do anything that the credit bureaus would frown upon, such as help
you repair your credit.
In fact, if you decide to leave
CCCS before you have finished their program, they can list your failure
to complete the process as a negative listing on your credit report
(though this is rare.) When you are participating in the CCCS program,
your creditors will often note it on your credit report. If you have
perfect credit, and wish to keep it, you may not want to use a credit
counseling service. These services usually create negative listings
because their process will generally make you late on your bills at
least 30 days.
The fact that you resorted to a
debt counseling program is a red flag for prospective credit grantors.
Remember, paying off your debts is a step in the right direction, but
it does not repair your credit.
With these factors in mind,
consumer credit counseling can be a life-saver if you're over your head
and need some help and some breathing room.
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Is it
illegal for creditors to take a negative, accurate listing off my
credit report? They tell me that the law requires that these items
remain on the credit report for at least seven years.
When you speak with credit
grantors, collection agencies, or credit bureaus, their typically
under-educated staff may tell you all manner of such pseudo-legal
nonsense. The law demands that negative listings appear on your credit
report for no longer than seven years. The credit grantor or the credit
bureau can choose to delete the negative credit listing whenever they
see fit.
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How hard is it to repair my own credit?
Repairing your credit by
yourself is possible. But remember, the credit bureaus are committed to
the failure of credit repair efforts, and the credit bureaus have far
more experience in discouraging hopeful consumers than you have in
beating giant credit bureaus.
Yet, some consumers have
achieved results in repairing their credit without professional
assistance. The following is a guide to help you determine whether or
not you should seek professional assistance in your credit repair
efforts.
Attempting to repair your own
credit while failing to dedicate sufficient time or attention can
result in further damage to your credit rating and may make it
impossible for anyone to repair your credit for you. For this purpose,
we'll give you a preview of the time commitment required to repair your
credit. Examine very carefully your capabilities and your schedule
before deciding to repair your own credit.
Example
of a Month's Activities in Restoring Your Credit (for a couple) |
Activity |
Hours
Required |
Monitored
calendar daily to check deadline of each of six credit bureau
correspondences |
2 hours |
Drafted six new
original credit bureau query challenges |
4 hours |
Visited post
office six times to mail correspondences by Certified Mail/Return
Receipt Req. |
2 hours |
Carefully
analyzed and marked six credit reports to find negatives/deletions/
positive changes |
3 hours |
Drafted 4 tardy
credit bureau response follow-up letters |
2 hours |
Visited post
office 4 times to mail follow'up letters by Certified Mail/Return
Receipt Req. |
2 hours |
Responded to 2
credit bureau stall letters by providing further information/
challenging time loss |
2 hours |
Visited post
office 2 times to mail stall responses by Certified Mail/Return Receipt
Req. |
1 hour |
Responded to 2
"frivolous or irrelevant" credit bureau rejection of dispute letters |
2 hours |
Visited post
office 2 times to mail "frivolous or irrelevant" claim Certified
Mail/Return Receipt Req. |
1 hour |
Requisitioned
six new credit reports at $8.00 each through local credit bureau |
2 hours |
Contacted ten
creditors and made creditor-direct challenges |
8 hours |
Drafted 20
letters to creditors (one per spouse) to challenge and demand further
documentation |
4 hours |
Visited post
office once to mail letters to creditors Certified Mail/Return Receipt
Req. |
2 hours |
Contacted ten
creditors by telephone to negotiate deletion of negative listing |
4 hours |
Carefully
analyzed ten responses from creditors with billing histories and
promissory agreements |
5 hours |
Contacted six
state, federal, and licensing organizations to locate addresses and
forms for complaints |
2 hours |
Prepared
complaints to six state, federal, and licensing organizations |
3 hours |
Visited post
office to mail complaints Certified Mail/Return Receipt Req. |
.5 hours |
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Total hours per
month (first month) |
51.5 hours |
This chart shows liberal
estimates of time required to repair your own credit. If you are a
single person working on his/her credit alone, you can subtract 25%
from the total time required. This time investment will continue on a
monthly basis, gradually shrinking as creditors agree to delete their
listings. On the average, you can expect the process to take between
twelve to eighteen months, unless you have very little negative credit
(meaning, one negative item per report.)
Each response to a creditor or
a credit bureau must be an original and must pertain specifically to
your present situation or you may be red-flagged as a frivolous credit
repair troublemaker or be ignored altogether. There are no effective
"form letters" or "fill in the blank" responses that yield results.
Credit bureau checkers spot form letters easily as the sign of someone
attempting to repair their credit. As such, these letters generally
earn a swift "frivolous and irrelevant" response.
Dueling with the credit bureaus
and credit grantors requires an aggressive and tenacious personality.
You must be willing to wade through rejection after rejection until you
achieve your desired credit repair.
The credit bureaus will shoot
down the majority of your claims and disputes. They will treat you like
a disreputable person and a liar. You must take this rejection without
becoming discouraged. If you are the kind of person who tires quickly
from an emotional struggle, you should seriously consider hiring a
professional to repair your credit. If you are the kind of person who
becomes angry when dealing with the slow, bureaucratic employees of big
bureaucracies, you will not fare well. Patience is an absolute
requirement. If you are thick-skinned and have the fortitude to fight
the credit bureaus and your creditors for as long as it takes, then you
may have the proper disposition to repair your own credit.
In the process of repairing
your credit, you will have to track and monitor dozens of
communications at once. This will require organized, disciplined
habits. Every day, you must check up on each of these communications to
make sure that the credit bureau or credit grantor hasn't overextended
their time limit. You must spend at least one-half to one hour per day
tracking your responses, results, and taking appropriate actions.
Remember, you will be dealing with three credit bureaus per person,
plus you will be communicating with each credit grantor appearing on
each credit report. In most cases, the number of simultaneous
communications will exceed twenty or thirty. If you are not a very
organized person, you are definitely not in a good position to attempt
to repair your own credit.
Click Here To Learn More About Credit Repair.
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If you have inaccurate
information on your credit report you can Let a Law Firm Remove your Negative Items from your
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