Top Ten Credit Myths
- When I pay off a past-due account, such as a charge off or a collection account, it will show "paid" and will no longer be negative.
- If I succeed in deleting a negative item, it will just come right back on my credit report.
- There are negative listings, such as bankruptcies and foreclosures, that are impossible to remove from the credit report.
- Disputing the credit report is easy and any consumer can do it himself for the price of a few postage stamps.
- If I declare bankruptcy, I can begin my credit report all over with a clean slate.
- If you are not satisfied with the results of your credit bureau challenge, you may file a "100-word statement" on your credit report explaining your side of the story.
- By changing numbers in my social security number or by using an EIN tax number, I can fool the credit bureaus into creating a completely clean, new credit file under my name.
- If I build enough good credit, it will offset my bad credit and make me credit worthy.
- I can improve my credit score by closing down some credit cards.
- It is illegal for creditors to take a negative, accurate listing off my credit report.
Myth #1: When I pay off a past-due account, such as a charge off or a collection account, it will show "paid" and will no longer be negative.
It is quite difficult to restore your credit without somehow
satisfying your outstanding debts. However, paying an
outstanding, delinquent debt you will change the account status
to "paid collection," "paid was late," or "paid was charged off"
- which will still stand out as a very negative listing. When
you have outstanding debt, it is almost always prudent to seek
professional help so that you may settle your debts while
creating a reasonable possibility of deletion of the negative
listing at the same time.
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Myth #2: If I succeed in deleting a negative item, it will just come right back on my credit report.
The credit bureaus have cleverly spread this myth through the
news media and government agencies. In truth, the credit bureaus
will often temporarily delete a negative listing if they haven't
heard from the credit grantor after approximately thirty days.
If the credit grantor reports late, say after six weeks, and
then verifies the negative listing, the credit bureau will often
reinsert the negative listing on the credit report. This is
often known as a "soft delete." Usually, though, the creditor
simply fails to respond and the negative listing is permanently
deleted. If the item is verified by the credit grantor, either
before thirty days or after, the account may still be challenged
again at some future time.
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Myth #3: There are negative listings, such as bankruptcies and foreclosures, that are impossible to remove from the credit report.
There is no type of negative listing that hasn't been removed
from a credit report thousands of times by Lexington Law Firm.
Negative items, such as bankruptcy or unpaid debts, are
certainly more difficult to remove from the credit report, but
this has more to do with the operational systems of the credit
bureaus than with the severity of the bad credit item. For
example, judgments and tax liens are severely negative listings,
yet are easier to remove.
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Myth #4: Disputing the credit report is easy and any consumer can do it himself for the price of a few postage stamps.
Disputing the credit report is easy. Getting results from the
credit bureaus is amazingly difficult, complex, and infuriating.
Remember, the credit bureaus are primarily interested in
protecting their profits. Investigating your challenge consumes
these profits. Short of sparking a mass number of lawsuits, the
credit bureaus seem to do everything in their power to
discourage consumers from making progress with their credit
restoration. Restoring your own credit report is like repairing
your own transmission or representing yourself in court; it is
possible, but you must decide if your are willing to take the
time and assume the risks of doing it yourself.
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Myth #5: If I declare bankruptcy, I can begin my credit report all over with a clean slate.
Many bankruptcy attorneys do not adequately understand or
explain the effects of bankruptcy to their clients. Stated
simply, bankruptcy is to the credit rating what the nuclear bomb
is to war. When you file for bankruptcy, every credit account
that you decide to include in bankruptcy will become an
"included in bankruptcy" account. Additionally, a bankruptcy
filing and bankruptcy discharge listing will appear in the court
records section of your credit report. Because so many negative
items are attached to the bankruptcy, it becomes difficult to
remove all trace of the bad credit. If at all possible, you
should avoid bankruptcy.
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Myth #6: If you are not satisfied with the results of your credit bureau challenge, you may file a "100-word statement" on your credit report explaining your side of the story.
Creditors will read your statement and will take it into
consideration. To our knowledge, no known creditor considers
information given in a 100-word statement. The statement only
serves to verify some of the negative listings on the credit
report. Make 100-word statements the first things you delete
from your credit file.
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Myth #7: By changing numbers in my social security number or by using an EIN tax number, I can fool the credit bureaus into creating a completely clean, new credit file under my name.
This scheme has proven to be complex, difficult, and illegal.
Lying about any personal information on a credit application is
usually a criminal offense. Using these "file segregation"
schemes requires an enormous amount of coordination, not to
mention personal risk.
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Myth #8: If I build enough good credit, it will offset my bad credit and make me credit worthy.
After all, I was only late a couple of times. Any amount of bad
credit is devastating to your chances of being approved by a
credit grantor. Most credit grantors never actually look at your
credit report. A computer pulls your credit report, rates your
credit standing, indebtedness, and stability, then spits out an
acceptance or denial. Even one or two slow pays will usually
trigger a credit card or personal loan denial. The slightest
amount of negative credit will cause the interest on an auto
loan to skyrocket. You will probably find that even a little bad
credit, regardless of how much good credit you have, is an
unacceptable barrier to credit approval.
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Myth #9: I can improve my credit score by closing down some credit cards.
For starters, closing down credit cards usually leads to a
significant decrease in the credit score. What's more, consumers
focus far too much on positive credit while negative credit
still appears on the credit report. Negative credit effectively
wipes out any amount of positive credit when the score is
calculated.
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Myth #10: It is illegal for creditors to take a negative, accurate listing off my credit report.
The law requires that these items remain on the credit report
for at least seven years. When you speak with credit grantors,
collection agencies, or credit bureaus, their typically
under-educated staff may tell you all manner of such
pseudo-legal nonsense. The law demands that negative listings
appear on your credit report for no longer than seven years. The
credit grantor or the credit bureau can choose to delete the
negative credit listing whenever they see fit.
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