We recently received a question from a reader who is looking for advice on how to repair her credit and whether or not using a credit repair company to help is a good idea:
I am presently trying to repair my credit. I have been laid off three times in the past ten years and I have a lot of work to do. What is the best way to get my credit score up? Would it be better for me to pay a credit repair agency to do it for me?
Picking up the pieces and recovering from a financial setback isn’t easy, especially in situations where you’re hit with one financial curveball after another. Losing one job due to a layoff is stressful and financially debilitating enough — being laid off from three jobs would be nothing short of devastating. Understandably, it can also end up causing a great deal of credit damage along the way.
Hiring a credit repair company to help you repair your credit can be tempting. However, unless you truly understand what they do and how they do it, it’s not a strategy I’d recommend. For one, despite their promises to “erase bad credit,” there is no special insider technique that miraculously erases past credit problems. Plus, you can do everything a credit repair company will do — and you can do it for free, without forking out the $39 – $79 a month that many credit repair companies will charge.
What Credit Repair Companies Do
Under federal law, you have the right to dispute inaccurate information in your credit reports. When you hire a credit repair service, you agree to let the credit repair firm act on your behalf in the dispute process. The credit repair company then asks you to obtain all three of your credit reports so that they can go through them line by line and identify any negative information currently being reported. Once they’ve identified all of the negative items, they’ll begin systematically disputing every negative piece of information in your credit reports — whether it’s accurate or not.
By law, the credit reporting agencies have 30 days to open an investigation and resolve the dispute. The investigation process involves validating the item with the data furnisher (the creditor or entity that reported the item). If the data furnisher is unable to validate the accuracy of the item within the 30-day window, the credit reporting agency must delete the item entirely. This is what credit repair companies are aiming for by bombarding the credit reporting agencies with dispute letters.
Why This System Doesn’t Really Work
If credit repair agencies are successful in getting negative information removed, why wouldn’t it be a good idea? Besides the obvious (the information being accurate), there are two big reasons why disputing accurate negative information is a bad idea:
1. Flooding the credit reporting agencies with disputes against accurately reported negative information can backfire. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, if the credit bureau determines that a dispute is a blatant attempt to have negative but accurate information removed, your dispute can be flagged as “frivolous.” If this happens, the dispute won’t be investigated and can cause future disputes to be ignored.
2. If the credit reporting agencies are unable to validate the dispute within the 30-day investigation period and the item is deleted, it doesn’t mean it can’t end up back in your credit report later. Even if the credit repair agencies are successful in getting through the 30-day investigation crack, if the item is accurate and the creditor or data furnisher reports an update or re-reports the item to the credit reporting agencies — it’ll end up right back on your credit report.
Do-It-Yourself
Instead of paying a credit repair service to fix your credit, consider going the DIY route. For the price of a stamp and an envelope, you can save your money and file your disputes yourself. Start by ordering copies of your credit reports. You’re entitled to one free credit report from each of the three major credit reporting agencies each year. You can also monitor your credit score for free once a month using Credit.com’s Credit Report Card.
If you find that there is any inaccurate information being reported in your credit report, file a dispute to have it corrected. Because your credit reports and credit scores are only as accurate as the information being reported, this is an important first step to improving your credit.
For more in-depth information on rebuilding your credit and improving your credit scores, Credit.com offers a consumer library of helpful resources including:
- How to Rebuild Your Credit
- 5 Things That Affect Your Credit Score
- 11 Tips to Rebuild Your Credit
- How Long Does Negative Information Stay On My Credit Report?
- A Step-by-Step Guide to Disputing Credit Report Mistakes
- 8 Rules of an Effective Credit Report Dispute Letter
Image: iStockphoto
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