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How to Correct Credit Errors
You have the right, under
the Fair Credit Reporting Act, to dispute the completeness and accuracy
of information in your credit file. When a credit reporting agency receives
a dispute, it must reinvestigate and record the current status of the
disputed items within a "reasonable period of time," unless
it believes the dispute is "frivolous or irrelevant." If the
credit reporting agency cannot verify a disputed item, it must delete
it. If your report contains erroneous information, the credit reporting
agency must correct it. If an item is incomplete, the credit reporting
agency must complete it.
For example, if your file
showed that you were late in making payments on accounts, but failed to
show that you were no longer delinquent, the credit reporting agency must
show that your payments are now current. Or if your file showed an account
that belongs only to another person, the credit reporting agency would
have to delete it. Also, at your request, the credit reporting agency
must send a notice of correction to any report recipient who has checked
your file in the past six months.
For those items in your
credit profile which you feel deserve further explanation (such as an
account that was paid late due to the loss of job, military call-up, or
unexpected medical bills), you may send a brief statement to the appropriate
credit reporting agency. The information will be placed on your credit
profile and will be disclosed each time your credit profile is accessed.
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