Consumer Credit Counseling

Call 1-800 254-4100 toll free

Home

Contact Us

About Us

Credit Counseling Service

Counseling Questionnaire

Debt Management Plan

Credit Repair

Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy Course

Bankruptcy Certificate

Bankruptcy Counseling

Business Debt

Credit-Debt Library

 

What is a Credit Report?

Whenever you apply for any type of credit or financing, a credit report is pulled from at least one of the three major credit bureaus. While there are hundreds of smaller credit bureaus around the country, virtually every credit bureau is affiliated with Trans Union, Experian, or Equifax. These credit bureaus collect and maintain information on the vast majority of Americans, but they are not affiliated with the government in any way. The credit bureaus are for-profit corporations that sell your personal information for money.

The credit bureaus receive your personal information through the same lenders who grant you credit. They have agreements with each of these credit grantors that require the credit grantor to inform the credit bureaus of everything that occurs in your relationship with the credit grantor. If you make a payment late, the negative credit listing is quickly reported to at least one of the three major credit bureaus and is added to your credit history.

Credit reports are not just a record of how you are currently managing your credit accounts. Credit reports are histories of everything you are doing with your credit now, and everything you have done in the past. The credit bureaus collect this information, list it on your credit report, and then sell it to credit grantors who wish to see your credit history before they decide to lend you money. The credit grantors who review your credit are especially interested in any negative credit. If you have shown any tendency to pay late, or to disregard your financial commitments in the past, then the creditors' computers will immediately reject your application. Just like when you were in grade school, your credit report is your financial report card to the world. Learn More.

What Kind of Information Appears on the Credit Report?

Merchant Trade Lines These include all regular credit lines such as department store cards, auto loans, mortgages, and credit cards. If there is any history of late payment, or if the trade line was included in bankruptcy, charged off, or put into repossession, the listing will be considered negative by all credit grantors.

Collection Accounts When an account is referred to collections because of delinquency or because of a bad check, this appears on the credit report as a collection account. Collection accounts can appear as paid or unpaid accounts. Any type of collection account, whether paid or not, is considered very negative by all credit grantors.

Public Records Public records include bankruptcies, judgments, liens, satisfied judgments, and satisfied liens. All court records, including satisfactions, are considered negative by all credit grantors.

Inquiries Every time a potential credit grantor looks at your credit file, a credit inquiry appears on at least one of your credit bureau reports. If the number of inquiries is very few over the last two years, then there may be no negative effect on your credit worthiness. However, if there are many recent inquiries showing on your credit report, credit grantors may become nervous and deny you credit.

Learn More.

How Long Will Negative Information Stay on My Credit Report?

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires that most negative credit items be deleted from your credit bureau file in no more than seven years, except for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy which can be reported for up to ten years. These are the time limits for reporting negative credit. The creditor or the credit bureau can choose to have the negative credit information deleted whenever they please. Inquiries may remain on the credit report for up to two years. Lexington Law is a professional credit repair company that can help you with this.

Can I See My Credit Report?

Most credit grantors are not allowed by the credit bureaus to show you your own credit report. But you can purchase your credit report from the credit bureau for a fee. Once you receive your credit report, you may find that you cannot read it because the information is listed in an unfamiliar code. Trans Union and Equifax credit reports are particularly difficult to interpret and understand. Experian credit reports, however, are relatively easy for most people to read. Your best bet would be to order a 3-in-1 combined bureau report since they are the easiest to read. To order one, visit www.creditrepair.com.

How Much Bad Credit Does it Take for Me to be Denied Credit?

As you may have already experienced, even one small late pay listing may result in credit denials. It is a myth that a large amount of positive credit can outweigh some negative credit. Any negative credit whatsoever can become a substantial credit obstacle. Learn More.

Who Looks at My Credit Report?

With the passing of each year, your credit report is used more and more often as a yardstick to measure your character. Prospective creditors will always review at least one of your credit reports before granting you credit. Today it is increasingly common for insurance companies to review your credit before extending auto or health insurance. Many employers now check credit before they consider you for a position. If you rent, you may have already been through a credit check to determine your worthiness as a renter. Learn More.



   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Loading

Consumer Credit Counseling Service

  
         
   Consumer credit counseling service            Consumer credit counseling service            SEO Genie     Consumer credit counseling service         Consumer credit counseling service        
         
                   



Original content © 1994 by Consumer Counseling Centers of America, Inc.                                                                            

 Consumer credit counseling service 
FAIR USE NOTICE
consumercounseling.org  This site contains copyrighted material, the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, scientific, and social justice issues etc. US LAW We believe that our use of any such copyrighted material constitutes a 'fair use' as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: preview Law Cornell Edu.


FTC Notice

Beginning December 1, 2009, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) began enforcing new rules regarding transparency in advertising relations between product endorsers, advertisers, affiliate marketers, product reviewers, bloggers, celebrities, and other marketers, and the general public.
Opinions on this blog/website are our own or others we have designated as contributing authors. No one else is responsible for the content. We have not received any compensation for writing posts, articles, reviews, or other content, and we have no material connection to the brands or products mentioned, except as noted below. We do not accept free products from manufacturers or advertisers or free books from writers and publishers in exchange for a review or an article. All of the product reviews on this blog are influenced solely by the performance of the product itself. We do not receive any kind of monetary compensation for content or reviews including cash or free products.

Affiliate Notice
We maintain an affiliate/publisher/republisher relationship with hundreds of companies. This page may contain “affiliate links” to one or more of these companies.
An affiliate link is a special URL to the affiliate merchant which lets him/her know you reached his/her site/sales page through my recommendation, text link, or banner ad. If you follow an affiliate link from this website and purchase a product or service, or complete a lead form, we hope to be paid a commission from the affiliate or CPA merchant. Affiliate links may be textual or banner or both. This site may contain in-context textual ads or banner ads, such as from Google, or others over which we have no control over the content. We may or may not have an affiliate/business relationship with the companies advertising on those services. If you click on one of these links, we hope to be paid a small sum for sending you to that merchant’s site. Otherwise, we would have no reason to give Google and others space on this website.You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. We cannot control the activities of other advertisers or web sites. Unless otherwise stated, the website guest or visitor should assume that any link to a third-party vendor is a paid link, and that the author or website owner may receive compensation for that link.

TERMS OF USE AND DISCLOSURE


Legal Information Is Not Legal Advice

This site provides information about the law designed to help users safely cope with their own legal needs. But legal information is not the same as legal advice -- the application of law to an individual's specific circumstances. Although we go to great lengths to make sure our information is accurate and useful, we recommend you consult a lawyer if you want professional assurance that our information, and your interpretation of it, is appropriate to your particular situation.

Consumer Credit Counseling Information, Debt Management Plan Information, Debt Settlement Plan information, Credit Counseling, Credit Score, Consumer Credit Counseling Service, CCCS, Bill Consolidation, Credit Repair, and Debt Consolidation is not advice, and we recommend you consult a licensed credit counseling agency, debt settlement attorney, and/or licensed debt management plan administrator in your state if you want professional assurance that our information, and your interpretation of it, is appropriate to your particular situation.

Consumer credit counseling service

Consumer credit counseling service