Get Your Annual Free Credit Report - Why Pay For It?

You can get an annual free credit report from any of the three major credit bureaus. If you have ever had credit, then there is a report on your borrowing and repaying at one of these bureaus - maybe all three. The Fair Credit Reporting Act is a law saying that every person is entitled to receive one annual free credit report once every twelve months from the credit bureaus. Annual credit...

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How To Repair Your Credit Report

Tom Coleman

A credit report is run on a buyer when he or she needs to buy something that will take a long-term loan, such as an automobile or a house. The credit report can come from one of three agencies – Equifax, Experian, and Trans Union. Each of these three agencies uses their own techniques of arriving at a credit score and receiving credit information, so attention should be paid to all three. A credit report score can go up to 800, and an increase of 50 points is a big one, enabling borrowers to get loans they previously were denied, and getting loans at much better interest rates. A 1% drop in an interest rate on a $150,000 house, for instance, may drop a payment by over $100 a month, saving the borrower over $35,000 over the life of the 30-year loan.Each of these credit agencies have taken all the financial information they can find about you and tabulated a credit score from those results. Information will include your current and previous home addresses and employers, the credit cards and loans you have, and any late payments made over the last ten years. These agencies’ credit reports will be very similar, but there will be differences, as they all make mistakes, and the banks and credit card companies giving them the information make mistakes, too.Here’s where you can improve your credit score. Any request for a change in information in a credit report must be answered and corrected within 30 days because federal law regulates the credit bureaus. If you write in to a credit bureau complaining that one of the late payments on your credit report is wrong, they must investigate and correct the information within the 30 days, or delete the information. Because this deadline is very difficult to make, often the late payment report is simply deleted off of the credit report. This procedure is very slow and time-consuming, and you can either do it yourself or hire an agency to do it for you. Each letter should only request one change, otherwise the credit bureau will usually declare the request to be frivolous and thus they are not required to do anything. Each letter should be written to all three credit reporting agencies. These agencies, Equifax, Experian, and Trans Union, all have PO boxes specifically set up for complaints, but they change the PO Boxes often to make it difficult for customers to find. Every month you, or the agency you have hired, should send out another letter referring to a different mistake in your credit report. After many months, your credit report will show many fewer late payments, perhaps even none, and your credit score will have improved dramatically. The author runs the finance website http://www.pawninfo.com about short-term loans and payday loans, and any or all of this article may be reproduced in any form as long as there is a link to the website. The HTML is Pawn Shops and Short Term Loans

About the author: The author runs the finance website http://www.pawninfo.com about short-term loans and payday loans, and any or all of this article may be reproduced in any form as long as there is a link to the website. The HTML is Pawn Shops and Short Term Loans


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Credit Repair: Beyond the Fair Credit Reporting Act (Wellsville Daily Reporter)
(ARA) - Bad credit can happen to good people. On a day-to-day basis, you can't control all the factors that influence your credit score. What's more, credit reports often contain errors.
Free Credit Repair Secrets Teach Consumers How To Fix Ugly Credit (PR Web via...
Sarasota, FL (PRWEB) November 9, 2006 -- FixMyUglyCredit has launched a free credit repair e-course at www.
Avoid Home Repair Nightmares (The Motley Fool)
Americans spent more than $200 billion on home repair/remodel projects in 2005 and have shown few signs of slowing up in 2006, which means that there are a whole lot of very happy contractors out there, bank accounts bulging. But their happiness doesn't necessarily equate with the homeowner's.
Free Credit Repair Secrets Teach Consumers How To Fix Ugly Credit (PR Web)
From the comfort of home, people with damaged credit can fix their own credit with free step-by-step, easy-to-understand strategies and secrets from FixMyUglyCredit.com. (PRWeb Nov 9, 2006) Trackback URL: http://prweb.com/pingpr.php/WmV0YS1NYWduLVByb2YtUGlnZy1NYWduLVplcm8=
Bad Credit and Home Refinance (Kewanee Star Courier)
(ARA) - Mortgage rates are at historic lows, and it seems like everyone's jumping on the refinance bandwagon these days. But is it really a good idea for people with bad credit?
Avoid Home Repair Nightmares (The Motley Fool)
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Managing Your Credit Can be as Easy as Clicking a Mouse (Ridgecrest Daily Ind...
(ARA) - Managing your credit can be like balancing a plate in an old circus act - look away for just a moment and everything can come crashing down around you. But the task doesn't have to be that hard. In fact, online credit monitoring and management tools can make it as easy as clicking a mouse.
Police: Fake ?Uzi? taken into credit union (Fort Wayne Journal Gazette)
Two juveniles were taken into police custody Thursday morning after they were seen carrying what turned out to be a fake weapon into the Three Rivers Credit Union on Bluffton Road, police said.
Starting a PC Repair Business (Entrpreneur.com)
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The week in review (The Cincinnati Enquirer)
By now, you know the storyline from Tuesday's election: Democrats won big at the federal, state and county levels. Here's The Enquirer's take on some of the other election winners and losers.