FCRA

What Counts as a “Reasonable Investigation” Under the FCRA?

When you dispute a debt, the law requires a reasonable investigation.

But what does that actually mean?


The Legal Standard

Under the FCRA, once a credit bureau notifies a furnisher of a dispute, the furnisher must:

  • Conduct a reasonable investigation
  • Review all relevant information provided
  • Correct inaccurate or incomplete reporting

A “reasonable investigation” is fact-specific.

It must be more than rubber-stamping prior information.


What Is NOT Reasonable?

Courts have found investigations unreasonable when:

  • The furnisher blindly verifies its own internal records.
  • No documentation is reviewed.
  • Obvious inconsistencies are ignored.
  • The dispute is coded incorrectly.
  • The furnisher relies solely on automated systems without review.

An investigation must involve meaningful review.


What May Be Considered Reasonable?

  • Reviewing underlying account records.
  • Comparing payment history.
  • Reviewing dispute documentation.
  • Confirming balance calculations.
  • Correcting errors when found.

The more detailed your dispute, the more thorough the investigation must be.


Why This Matters

If a furnisher fails to conduct a reasonable investigation after receiving notice from a credit bureau, you may have:

  • A private right of action under the FCRA
  • The ability to seek actual damages
  • Potential statutory or punitive damages for willful violations
  • Attorney’s fees

The investigation requirement is one of the strongest consumer protections in credit reporting law.

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