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Your Credit
Rights - Know Them - Use Them
A Summary
of Your Rights
Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act
To promote accuracy,
fairness, and privacy of information, consumer credit reporting
organizations are required to follow the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act
(FCRA). This act is designed to ensure that information contained in your
credit file, and sold to other agencies and entities, is accurate.
Credit Reporting Agencies (CRA’s)
gather information about you such as your history of paying bills to
creditors, landlords, and other businesses, or if you have ever filed for
bankruptcy. This collected information is then sold to people who grant
credit, employers, insurance agencies, landlords, and others who might
user it to make a determination about you based, at least in part, on your
credit report.
You should be aware of the
specific rights this law gives you. The highlights are outlined below. You
may have additional rights under state law. You may contact a state or
local consumer protection agency or a state attorney general to learn
those rights.
- You must be told if
information in your file has been used against you. Anyone who uses
information from a CRA to take action against you -- such as denying
an application for credit, insurance, or employment -- must tell you,
and give you the name, address, and phone number of the CRA that
provided the consumer report.
- You can find out what is
in your file. At your request, a CRA must give you the information in
your file, and a list of everyone who has requested it recently. There
is no charge for the report if a person has taken action against you
because of information supplied by the CRA, if you request the report
within 60 days of receiving notice of the action. You also are
entitled to one free report every twelve months upon request if you
certify that (1) you are unemployed and plan to seek employment within
60 days, (2) you are on welfare, or (3) your report is inaccurate due
to fraud. Otherwise, a CRA may charge you up to eight dollars.
- You can dispute
inaccurate information with the CRA. If you tell a CRA that your file
contains inaccurate information, the CRA must investigate the items
(usually within 30 days) by presenting to its information source all
relevant evidence you submit, unless your dispute is frivolous. The
source must review your evidence and report its findings to the CRA.
(The source also must advise national CRAs -- to which it has provided
the data -- of any error.) The CRA must give you a written report of
the investigation, and a copy of your report if the investigation
results in any change. If the CRA's investigation does not resolve the
dispute, you may add a brief statement to your file. The CRA must
normally include a summary of your statement in future reports. If an
item is deleted or a dispute statement is filed, you may ask that
anyone who has recently received your report be notified of the
change.
- Inaccurate information
must be corrected or deleted. A CRA must remove or correct inaccurate
or unverified information from its files, usually within 30 days after
you dispute it. However, the CRA is not required to remove accurate
data from your file unless it is outdated (as described below) or
cannot be verified. If your dispute results in any change to your
report, the CRA cannot reinsert into your file a disputed item unless
the information source verifies its accuracy and completeness. In
addition, the CRA must give you a written notice telling you it has
reinserted the item. The notice must include the name, address and
phone number of the information source.
- You can dispute
inaccurate items with the source of the information. If you tell
anyone -- such as a creditor who reports to a CRA -- that you dispute
an item, they may not then report the information to a CRA without
including a notice of your dispute. In addition, once you've notified
the source of the error in writing, it may not continue to report the
information if it is, in fact, an error.
- Outdated information may
not be reported. In most cases, a CRA may not report negative
information that is more than seven years old; ten years for
bankruptcies.
- Access to your file is
limited. A CRA may provide information about you only to people with a
need recognized by the FCRA -- usually to consider an application with
a creditor, insurer, employer, landlord, or other business.
- Your consent is required
for reports that are provided to employers, or reports that contain
medical information. A CRA may not give out information about you to
your employer, or prospective employer, without your written consent.
A CRA may not report medical information about you to creditors,
insurers, or employers without your permission.
- You may choose to
exclude your name from CRA lists for unsolicited credit and insurance
offers. Creditors and insurers may use file information as the basis
for sending you unsolicited offers of credit or insurance. Such offers
must include a toll-free phone number for you to call if you want your
name and address removed from future lists. If you call, you must be
kept off the lists for two years. If you request, complete, and return
the CRA form provided for this purpose, you must be taken off the
lists indefinitely.
- You may seek damages
from violators. If a CRA, a user or (in some cases) a provider of CRA
data, violates the FCRA, you may sue them in state or federal court.
Federal regulations protect
you against inaccurate information being used to harm you. If you think
you have been adversely affected by inaccurate information on your credit
report contact the proper agency and take appropriate acting.
For more
credit related acts, click on the links below:
[
Credit Main | Debt
Collection Act |
Equal
Credit Opportunity |
Credit
Billing Act |
Credit
Repair ]
[ Credit
Bureau | Credit
Reporting ]
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Credit Cards
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Consumer Rights
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