Archive for February, 2008
Don’t Live With Bad Credit Use LexingtonLaw
You may be closer to a bad credit situation than you think. If you fall into a bad credit situation then LexingtonLaw can help you out.
These days it’s just too darn easy for good people to get hung up in the credit trap. Your good credit can evolve into bad credit almost before you know it.
One layoff in a two income family, a declining housing market, perhaps giving in to all of those teaser credit card offers and then actually using the darn things, strains put on the family budget by increasing food and energy costs, there are just so many things that can take your good credit into bad credit territory.
Goal for Your Life Together Becoming Credit Wise
Goal for Your New Life Together: Becoming Credit-Wise
Many people planning to be married take time to reexamine financial priorities, set a new budget, and establish savings or debt reduction goals.Being credit-wise consumers means realizing that managing your credit requires similar planning and care-and doubly so when you are entering into marriage.Think about your special personal and financial goals for the coming year.
How Credit Reports Work
How Credit Reports Work |
| What is a credit report? Whenever you apply for any type of credit or financing, a credit report is pulled from at least one of the three major credit bureaus. While there are hundreds of smaller credit bureaus around the country, virtually every credit bureau is affiliated with either Experian, Trans Union, or Equifax. |
Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
Below is a summary of the FCRA. The full Act can be obtained directly from the Federal Trade Commission’s web site here.
Fair Credit Reporting Act (Summary)
Public Law 91-508
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) allows a consumer to challenge the information on his credit report on the basis of “completeness and accuracy.” If, after a reinvestigation by the credit bureau, the disputed information “is found to be inaccurate or can no longer be verified, the [credit bureau] shall promptly delete such information.”
Understanding Your Credit Report
What is a Credit Report?
Whenever you apply for any type of credit or financing, a credit report is pulled from at least one of the three major credit bureaus. While there are hundreds of smaller credit bureaus around the country, virtually every credit bureau is affiliated with Trans Union, Experian, or Equifax. These credit bureaus collect and maintain information on the vast majority of Americans, but they are not affiliated with the government in any way. The credit bureaus are for-profit corporations that sell your personal information for money.
Repairing Your Own Credit
Repairing Credit Yourself
The Fair Credit Reporting Act gives you the right to dispute any and all items on your credit reports that you feel classify as inaccurate, unverifiable, or misleading. If the bureaus can not verify that the information on your reports is indeed correct, then those items must be deleted.
Disputing items on your credit report is easy. Getting results from the credit bureaus is amazingly difficult, complex, and infuriating. It is not a coincidence that the Federal Trade Commission receives more complaints against credit bureaus than any other type of business. 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 in their restoration efforts.
How Bad Credit Affects Your Life
How Bad Credit Affects You
Very few things in life can have a more devastating effect on your lifestyle than a poor credit score. A low credit score can cost you hundreds or even thousands of dollars per month.
Credit Cards
Most prime credit cards are entirely out of reach to consumers with bad credit. And the few credit cards that are available to them (known as “sub-prime” cards) typically require exorbitant setup fees or recurring monthly fees, offer very low credit lines, often require cash deposits, and in most cases do not even report your positive credit activity to the credit bureaus.
Can Consumers Fight Credit Fraud?
Can Consumers Fight Credit Fraud?
In this age of information, credit fraud is not a difficult crime to perpetrate. The idea that a thief could gain access to your account information or personal data is not as implausible as you might think–social security number misuse has increased over the last two years, resulting in a variety of credit-related crimes.
Fortunately, you can fight back against credit fraud by learning how credit fraud and identity theft occur, and by actively monitoring your credit report for unauthorized account use on a regular basis. Your credit report will list any new activity on accounts you haven’t been using, as well as new accounts that you did not open.