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How to Dispute Credit Report Errors and Raise Your Score

Step-by-step guide to finding and disputing errors on your credit report to improve your score, including templates and escalation strategies.

Last edited on May 17, 2026
5 min read

How to Dispute Credit Report Errors and Raise Your Score

One in five Americans has a material error on their credit report — wrong accounts, incorrect late payments, or balances that don't match reality. These errors can cost you thousands in higher interest rates, denied applications, and missed opportunities. A single disputed error corrected can improve your score by 25-100+ points.

Here's how to find errors, dispute them effectively, and get them removed.

How to Get Your Free Credit Reports

You're entitled to free reports from all three bureaus:

  • AnnualCreditReport.com — official source, all 3 bureaus free weekly
  • Equifax: equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services
  • Experian: experian.com/consumer-products
  • TransUnion: transunion.com/credit-reports

Important: Check ALL three — errors may appear on one but not others.

Common Errors to Look For

Account Errors

  • Accounts that aren't yours (mixed files, identity theft)
  • Closed accounts listed as open
  • Accounts listed as "settled" or "charged-off" that were paid in full
  • Wrong account type (revolving listed as installment)
  • Duplicate accounts (same debt listed twice)

Balance and Payment Errors

  • Incorrect current balance
  • Wrong credit limit (affects utilization ratio)
  • Late payments that weren't actually late
  • Payments not reported at all
  • Wrong date of last activity or first delinquency

Personal Information Errors

  • Wrong name spelling or variations
  • Incorrect address history
  • Wrong Social Security Number (partial)
  • Wrong employer information

Collection/Public Record Errors

  • Collections for debts you don't owe
  • Collections that should have fallen off (older than 7 years)
  • Paid collections still showing as unpaid
  • Judgments or liens that were satisfied but not updated
  • Bankruptcies older than 10 years still reporting

Step-by-Step Dispute Process

Step 1: Document the Error

For each error, gather:

  • The specific incorrect information
  • What the correct information should be
  • Supporting evidence (bank statements, payment receipts, correspondence)
  • Account numbers and dates

Step 2: File Disputes with Each Bureau

File with every bureau showing the error — they don't share dispute results.

Online (fastest acknowledgment):

  • Equifax: equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services/credit-dispute
  • Experian: experian.com/disputes
  • TransUnion: transunion.com/credit-disputes

By mail (strongest legal protection — recommended for serious errors): Send to:

  • Equifax: P.O. Box 740256, Atlanta, GA 30374
  • Experian: P.O. Box 4500, Allen, TX 75013
  • TransUnion: P.O. Box 2000, Chester, PA 19016

Step 3: Send a Dispute Letter to the Creditor

Under the FCRA, you can also dispute directly with the company reporting the error (called a "direct dispute"):

  • Send to the creditor/collection agency's address
  • They have the same obligation to investigate and correct

Step 4: Wait for Investigation (30 Days)

The bureau must:

  • Investigate within 30 days (45 if you send additional info)
  • Contact the creditor to verify the information
  • Notify you of the results in writing
  • Remove or correct information that can't be verified

Step 5: Review Results and Escalate If Needed

If your dispute is rejected:

  • Request the method of verification (you have this right)
  • Re-dispute with additional evidence
  • File CFPB complaint (consumerfinance.gov/complaint)
  • Send a "goodwill" letter to the creditor
  • Consult a consumer rights attorney (many work on contingency)

Dispute Letter Template

"[Your Name] [Your Address] [Date]

[Credit Bureau Name] [Bureau Address]

Re: Dispute of Inaccurate Information Report Number: [Your report confirmation number]

Dear Sir/Madam,

I am writing to dispute the following information on my credit report. The item(s) identified below are [inaccurate/incomplete/unverifiable]:

Account Name: [Creditor Name] Account Number: [XXXX-last 4 digits] Reason for Dispute: [Specifically describe what is wrong] Correct Information: [What it should say]

I am enclosing copies of [list supporting documents] as evidence supporting my dispute. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, Section 611, you are required to investigate this dispute within 30 days and remove any information that cannot be verified.

Please investigate and correct this error. Send me an updated copy of my report reflecting the correction.

Sincerely, [Your Name] [SSN last 4 digits]

Enclosures: [List all attached documents]"

Advanced Strategies

CFPB Complaints (Highly Effective)

File at consumerfinance.gov/complaint when:

  • Bureau doesn't respond within 30 days
  • Dispute is denied without adequate investigation
  • Error reappears after being removed (illegal under FCRA)

CFPB complaints have a 97% response rate and often resolve issues that direct disputes couldn't.

The 609 Letter Approach

Section 609 of the FCRA gives you the right to request the bureau's source documentation. If they can't produce the original source verifying the information, it should be removed. This is particularly effective for old debts and collections that original creditors may no longer have records for.

Goodwill Letters (For Accurate Negative Info)

If the information is accurate but you have a good explanation:

  • Write directly to the creditor requesting removal as a goodwill gesture
  • Explain the circumstances (medical emergency, job loss, etc.)
  • Note your otherwise clean history
  • Works best for single late payments on otherwise perfect accounts

Impact on Your Credit Score

Error Type Potential Score Impact When Removed
Collection removed +25 to +100 points
Late payment corrected to on-time +20 to +75 points
Wrong high balance/limit fixed +10 to +40 points
Duplicate account removed +10 to +50 points
Hard inquiry removed +5 to +15 points

Bottom Line

Credit report disputes are free, require minimal effort, and succeed more often than people expect. The combination of the 30-day investigation requirement and creditors who often can't verify old information means that persistent, well-documented disputes frequently result in error removal and score improvements. Start with your free reports, identify every questionable item, and dispute systematically — the potential payoff in better interest rates alone can be worth thousands of dollars over time.

Sources

  • FTC credit report accuracy study
  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dispute guidance
  • Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Sections 609, 611, 623
  • Federal Reserve consumer credit data

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