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What is the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)?
Below is a summary of the FCRA. The
full Act can be obtained directly from the Federal Trade Commission's
web site at www.ftc.gov
Fair Credit Reporting Act (Summary)Public
Law 91-508
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) allows a consumer to challenge the
information on his credit report on the basis of "completeness and
accuracy." If, after a reinvestigation by the credit bureau, the
disputed information "is found to be inaccurate or can no longer be
verified, the [credit bureau] shall promptly delete such information."
The credit bureaus are required to complete the investigation within a
"reasonable period of time." This period has been set at thirty days.
The credit bureaus can ignore the consumer dispute if they have reason
to believe that the dispute is "frivolous or irrelevant." The FTC
commentary on the FCRA cites, as an example of a frivolous dispute, a
dispute wherein the consumer challenges all negative items on his
credit report without providing any allegations regarding specific
items in the credit file. However, "A [credit bureau] must assume a
consumer's dispute is bona fide, unless there is clear and convincing
evidence to the contrary."
When a consumer challenges a negative credit listing on the basis of
extenuating circumstances, such as health problems, divorce, job loss,
etc., the credit bureaus are entitled to ignore that dispute.
When a consumer submits a dispute which is neither frivolous nor
irrelevant by credit bureau standards, the credit bureau must "at a
minimum... check with the original sources or other reliable sources of
the disputed information and inform them of the nature of the
consumer's dispute." In some cases of consumer dispute,
"Reinvestigation and verification may require more than asking the
original source of the disputed information the same question and
receiving the same answer." In other words, when a consumer files or
re-files a valid dispute, the credit bureaus must contact the source of
the credit information (the creditor) and confirm that the information
is accurate, verifiable, and not obsolete. In some circumstances, the
credit bureau is required to go beyond a simple verification of the
creditor's own computer record. If, within 30 days, the credit bureau
has not received verification from the creditor, then the credit bureau
must promptly delete the credit listing.
In theory and law, the process is deceptively simple, thus leading many
people to think that they can easily handle this themselves "for the
price of a few postage stamps." Most quickly discover that the credit
bureaus have made it much more difficult than one would imagine.
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Can bad credit be deleted?
Can credit repair companies be trusted?
Can credit repair companies really guarantee results?
How much does bad credit cost?
Are items such as bankruptcy and forclosure impossible to remove?
Should consumers try credit repair on their own?
Does bankruptcy wipe the slate clean for a second chance?
Do creditors bother to read the 100-word statement?
How can changing one's SSN or EIN tax number help credit matters?
Does enough good credit offset any bad credit?
Does the CCCS help consumers restore credit?
Do negative items remain listed for at least 7 years?
What is the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)?
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