Letters to Credit Bureaus
Click the Source you feel
would Help the Most.
Credit bureaus maintain your credit report mainly for the lenders to help them verify your
credit status. So, your credit report needs to be accurate. Any misinterpretation of your credit status in your credit report will
definitely ruin your prospect of getting any loans. You have to ensure that the credit report reflects your real situation.
Credit bureaus should also monitor credit reports thoroughly to get rid of any mistakes. However, despite intense surveillance, if any fatal
mistake crops up in your credit report, you are free to file a dispute with the credit bureau.
Once the credit bureau receives your dispute, it gets in touch with the creditors of the corrected credit report. It will also have to update
your credit report to nullify the error. You need to send a demand letter to credit bureaus within 30 days of detection of
error. You should ask for the removal of the mistake from your credit report as soon as possible. If you have more than one mistake in your
credit report, you have to demand removal of each item in a separate letter. Also, you have to preserve those dispute letters in letter for
future reference. In turn, credit bureaus carry out investigations on the basis of your dispute. So, you have to offer adequate information to
authenticate your claim and help the bureaus conduct investigation. Credit bureaus should isolate the disputed information and try to remove them
from the credit report as soon as possible.
Also, it's the duty of credit bureaus to send correction notices to the lenders who have shown interest in your credit report in the past few
months. Incorrect personal information, inaccurate statements, and wrong public record information can all can make mortgage lenders or banks
skip your credit profile. You have to be extremely cautious when it comes to checking those vital data. If you detect something incorrect, do not
delay in writing letters to credit bureaus to restore accuracy in your credit report. Next Article: Consumer Credit Unions
Click the Source you feel would Help the Most.
|