Why credit report errors are so stressful
A credit report error can affect loan approvals, interest rates, housing applications, and even job opportunities. The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) sets rules for credit reporting agencies and (in many cases) the companies that furnish information to them.
The most common credit reporting problems
- Accounts that aren’t yours (mixed files/identity issues)
- Incorrect balances or payment statuses
- Accounts that should be marked closed or paid
- Duplicate accounts
- Old negative items that should have aged off
- Collections reporting inaccurately
Step-by-step: how to dispute effectively
Step 1: Get your reports and highlight the errors
- Pull your reports and identify each specific inaccuracy
- Create a list of “what’s wrong” and “what the correct info should be”
Step 2: Gather supporting documents
Examples:
- Payment confirmations
- Account statements
- Settlement letters
- Identity documents (only as needed)
- Police report/FTC identity report (for identity theft situations)
Step 3: Write a clear dispute
Checklist: what a good dispute includes
- Your identifying info (limited to what’s needed)
- The account name/number (partial if preferred)
- The exact item you dispute
- Why it’s inaccurate
- What you want corrected
- Copies (not originals) of supporting documents
Step 4: Track everything
- Keep copies of your dispute packet
- Keep proof of mailing or submission
- Save responses from the credit bureau and furnisher
What to avoid
- Disputes that are vague (“this is wrong”) without specifics
- Sending originals you can’t replace
- Disputing everything at once without organizing it
If you’ve disputed errors and the problem keeps coming back—or you’re unsure how to proceed—Ginsburg Law Group, PC can review your documents and help you understand your options under the FCRA.



