Understanding How Credit Repair Works
What is
Credit Repair?
The only way to repair credit is through the process of writing dispute letters to the three major credit reporting bureaus. Even if you call them on the phone, they will require you to send letters regarding any items you want to dispute on your credit reports. Though writing letters may seem like a simple step, repairing your credit is not. You usually have to send endless letters and the credit bureaus will often discourage you by refusing to investigate. This is where the law is on your side. You have the right to continue to dispute any incorrect items on your credit report and the credit bureaus are required to continue to investigate each and every item you are disputing.
Though the law is on your side, the Credit Repair process is frustrating and incredibily bureacratic to say the least. This is why there are thousands of
companies that will handle Credit Repair for you. Others will sell you a Do-It-Yourself kit to help you clean up or repair your credit.
Credit
Repair is Possible and Legal
Credit repair is not only possible, it is totally legal. The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) protects you. The FCRA maintains that the credit bureaus should always have an accurate and verifiable accounting of your credit history.
If at any time you determine that the information on your credit report is
not accurate, then you can ask for an investigation. A credit bureau must
respond to every request for an investigation and get back to you within a
reasonable amount of time (usually within thirty days).
The credit bureaus must contact a company that has submitted an item you are disputing and ask for verification
that the information on your credit report is accurate. Based on the company's response, the credit bureau will
then leave unchaged, update, correct, or delete the item. If a company in
question does not respond in a reasonable amount of time, then that item must be removed from your credit report until it is verified.
A Credit Repair expert has experience in dealing with the Credit Bureuas and can usually get better results, faster than if you attempted to repair your credit on your own.
So, can credit repair companies really guarantee results?
Not a chance! No credit repair company is so good that it can
guarantee a specific outcome. It would be like a defense lawyer guaranteeing
that the jury will find his client innocent. Guarantees are a sure sign of
credit repair fraud. A warranty, where the credit repair company promises a
refund if certain results don't occur, is a better, more realistic claim.
Not surprisingly, the credit bureaus have declared war against the
credit repair companies and those selling instruction on how to do-it-yourself.
The bureaus lambaste credit repair companies in the media and send anti-credit
repair literature to anyone whom they suspect of using credit repair services.
The bureaus unflinchingly deny that accurate information can be removed from a
credit report.
Some time ago, a couple in the United States who were
using the services of a legitimate credit repair company, received a scathing
letter of reproach from their local credit bureau. The letter chastened them for
relying on the "unethical" methods of credit repair, and pointed out how all
their efforts had come to nothing. "As you can see," the letter chastened, "your
credit reports remain unchanged." The couple was bewildered because almost all
of their many negative credit listings, including a bankruptcy, had long since
been deleted.
The simple truth is that you do not have to endure bad
credit for seven to ten years so long as you feel comfortable challenging the
accuracy or verifiability of your credit listings. If so, it is possible to
restore creditworthiness within a much shorter time.
However you decide
to address your credit challenges, realize that regardless of what you may hear
in the news media, thousands before you have sought help and restored their
credit. They can show you their homes, cars, and credit cards. Despite the
newspaper articles, TV reports, and other credit bureau propaganda to the
contrary, the simple truth remains: you can restore your credit.
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