How to Remove Negative Items on Your Credit Report

Can you tell me how to remove negative items on a credit report?

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Bill's Answer: Bills.com Resident Expert

The quick answer is that most items remain on your credit report for 7½ years.

Federal law (US Code Title 15, §1681c) controls the behavior of credit reporting agencies. This law is known as the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). Under FCRA §605 (a) and (b), an account in collection will appear on a consumer's credit report for 7½ years. The clock starts approximately 180 days after the date of first delinquency on the account. To learn when an account will be removed by the credit reporting agencies (TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian and others), add 7½ years to the date of first delinquency. Subsequent activity, such as resolving the debt, is irrelevant to the seven-year rule. However, if the debt is a tax lien, that can appear for seven years from the date of payment. A bankruptcy will appear for ten years from the date of the final order. Delinquent federal student loans can be reported indefinitely, i.e., for as long as they are delinquent.

Under the FCRA, all trade lines can be reported on each of the credit bureaus. However, the reporting agencies must update and keep accurate data in their credit files. If there is erroneous information (like a collection account, that you believe is inaccurate), you must notify them (typically through a certified letter) and then wait one reporting cycle (90 days) for the errors to be removed.

There are three major credit reporting agencies that offer credit reports, if there is something that you want added or removed, you should contact them directly:

Equifax Experian TransUnion
800-685-1111 888-397-3742 800-916-8800
Equifax.com Experian.com TransUnion.com
File a credit dispute online at Equifax File a credit dispute online at Experian File a credit dispute online at TransUnion

To get a hold of your credit report, contact one of these three bureaus. Each bureau interprets your credit information differently, so you might want to get a report from all three.

If you would like more information, please visit our credit resource page.

Comments (1)


Robert Y.
August 19, 2011
You will have to dispute those negative items. I disputed 14 negative items on my credit reports, 3 of which were bankruptcies. After the first round of disputes, I was shocked to see that 9 of the items had been deleted from my Equifax credit file, including all 3 bankruptcies! I have spent thousands of dollars over the last few years on credit repair services, trying to restore my credit. None of them helped me. They just took my money and didn't produce results. I got this software called turboscore.
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