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.

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.

Right 2: Know the Scope of Credit Reporting

What this means: Credit bureaus can only report certain types of information for certain time periods.

Right 3: Dispute Inaccurate Information

What this means: You can challenge any information you believe is incomplete or inaccurate.

Right 4: Right to Prompt Investigation

What this means: When you dispute, bureaus must investigate within a specific timeframe.

Right 5: Accurate Results Notification

What this means: You must be notified of investigation results in writing.

Right 6: Add Your Statement

What this means: If you disagree with bureau findings, you can add a brief statement.

Right 7: Opt Out of Marketing Lists

What this means: You can prevent credit bureaus from selling your info for marketing.

Right 8: Right to Sue for Violations

What this means: If a bureau violates your FCRA rights, you can sue.

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

How to Enforce Your Rights

Step 1: Document Everything

Step 2: File a CFPB Complaint

Step 3: Consider Legal Action

Key Takeaways