Your Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
Published June 16, 2024 | Legal Information Updated
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is a federal law that protects your rights as a consumer. Understanding these rights is crucial for effective credit disputes and protecting yourself from credit bureau mistakes. This guide covers everything you need to know.
What is the FCRA?
The Fair Credit Reporting Act, passed in 1970 and updated in 1996 and 2003, is a federal law that governs how credit bureaus collect, maintain, use, and distribute credit information. It's enforced by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and provides consumers with specific rights and protections.
Key Fact: The FCRA is your most powerful tool in credit disputes. It gives you rights that credit bureaus must follow, or they can be sued.
Your 8 Core Rights Under the FCRA
Right 1: Access Your Credit Report
What this means: You have the right to request and receive a copy of your credit report.
- You get one free report per year from each of the three major bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion)
- Obtain at AnnualCreditReport.com (the official source)
- If denied credit, you get an additional free report within 60 days
- You can request additional reports by paying a small fee (usually $5-20)
Right 2: Know the Scope of Credit Reporting
What this means: Credit bureaus can only report certain types of information for certain time periods.
- Negative items fall off after 7 years: Late payments, collections, charge-offs
- Bankruptcies stay 7-10 years: Chapter 7 for 10 years, Chapter 13 for 7 years
- Hard inquiries last 2 years: But impact score for only 12 months
- Paid collections can still be reported: Though some bureaus now hide paid collections
Right 3: Dispute Inaccurate Information
What this means: You can challenge any information you believe is incomplete or inaccurate.
- Send dispute via mail (certified), phone, or online
- No special format required—just clearly state what you're disputing
- Can dispute the same item multiple times with new evidence
- Bureaus must investigate at no cost to you
- Cannot charge you for disputing or investigating
Right 4: Right to Prompt Investigation
What this means: When you dispute, bureaus must investigate within a specific timeframe.
- 30 days: Standard investigation period from dispute receipt
- 45 days: Extended period if you dispute during an active dispute of the same item
- Must be "reasonable" investigation—not just rubber-stamping
- Must contact the creditor to verify (not just accept creditor's word)
- If creditor doesn't respond, item should be removed
Right 5: Accurate Results Notification
What this means: You must be notified of investigation results in writing.
- Bureau must provide written explanation of results
- Must include updated credit report (if changes made)
- Must explain how you can add a statement to your report
- If information was incorrect, it cannot reappear without new evidence
Right 6: Add Your Statement
What this means: If you disagree with bureau findings, you can add a brief statement.
- Add up to 100 words explaining your side
- Statement must be included with future credit reports
- Example: "I dispute this account—I never authorized it and believe it's fraudulent"
- Consumer statements can explain disputes and improve your case to lenders
Right 7: Opt Out of Marketing Lists
What this means: You can prevent credit bureaus from selling your info for marketing.
- Call 1-888-5OPTOUT (1-888-567-8688)
- Or visit OptOutPrescreen.com
- Reduces unsolicited credit offers
- Reduces identity theft risk from pre-approved offers
Right 8: Right to Sue for Violations
What this means: If a bureau violates your FCRA rights, you can sue.
- Sue for actual damages (money you lost)
- Sue for statutory damages up to $1,000 per violation
- Collect attorney fees if you win
- No statute of limitations for willful violations
- 2-year statute of limitations for negligent violations
How Long Does Negative Information Stay?
7 Years (Most Common): Late payments, charge-offs, collections, foreclosures, tax liens
10 Years: Chapter 7 bankruptcy
7 Years from filing: Chapter 13 bankruptcy
2 Years: Hard inquiries (stop impacting score after 12 months)
Indefinitely (if accurate): Positive payment history, accounts in good standing
Common FCRA Violations (You Can Sue For)
▼ Failure to Investigate Disputes: Bureau ignores your dispute or doesn't investigate properly
▼ Reinserting Removed Items: Removing an item then re-adding it without new evidence
▼ Failure to Correct Information: Not removing information found to be inaccurate during investigation
▼ Refusing to Add Consumer Statement: Bureau refusing to add your 100-word explanation
▼ Failing to Notify You: Not informing you of dispute results within required time
▼ Reporting Old Information: Reporting information that should have fallen off (older than 7 years)
Related Laws: FDCPA and CFPB
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA): If a debt collector is violating your rights (harassment, false claims, etc.), you can sue for up to $1,000 plus attorney fees. This is separate from FCRA.
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): You can file complaints against credit bureaus, debt collectors, and creditors. CFPB monitors complaints and can take enforcement action.
How to Enforce Your Rights
Step 1: Document Everything
- Keep copies of all correspondence
- Save certified mail receipts
- Document phone calls (date, time, who you spoke with)
- Keep your credit reports showing the violations
Step 2: File a CFPB Complaint
- Go to consumerfinance.gov/complaint
- File a complaint against the credit bureau
- Include documentation of the violation
- CFPB investigates and may take action
Step 3: Consider Legal Action
- Contact a consumer rights attorney (many work on contingency)
- Many attorneys offer free consultations
- If you win, the bureau pays your attorney fees
- Search "FCRA attorney" or "consumer rights attorney" + your state
Key Takeaways
1. You have powerful rights. The FCRA is designed to protect you. Use it.
2. Document everything. Proof of violations is crucial if you need to sue.
3. Credit bureaus must investigate. They can't just ignore disputes.
4. You can sue for violations. This gives bureaus incentive to follow the law.
5. Time matters. Act quickly on disputes and violations—statutes of limitations apply.