Credit report scores tell lenders who you are

Cleaning Up Bankruptcy

Cleaning Up Your Credit Report

A good score helps you get the best loans. The loan officer will be glad to see you because you will:

  • Qualify for a larger loan
  • Get a loan faster
  • Get the best interest rates.

There are basically three ways to clean up your credit report.

  • Dispute You can dispute items on your credit report. This may or may not remove the item from your report.
  • Negotiate Arrange with your creditor to pay off the debt in exchange for them requesting the credit bureaus to remove the negative item.
  • Pay and Wait Pay off the debt and wait (up to 7 years) for the item to be dropped.

In addition, a bankruptcy can remove negative items, but the bankruptcy can remain on your report for 10 years.

For a Powerful One-Time Upgrade of Your Credit Report

Lexington Law is a Law Firm specializing in credit report repair. They have helped over 80,000 Americans improve their credit scores by removing inaccurate, misleading, or unverifiable information from their credit reports.

"It's amazing what a letter from an attorney can do!"

The Lexington Law Firm is member of the online BBB and offers consumers a performance warrantee. From bankruptcies to charge-offs to tax liens, Lexington Law Firm has challenged virtually every credit problem under the sun and deleted over 600,000 such items to date.

Lexington Law's service is backed by a warranty which entitles you to some or all of your money back if enough disputed items aren’t deleted. Put simply, they don’t believe you should have to pay for ineffective service. "If we can’t deliver, you’ll be reimbursed."

How Long Can Negative Information Be Reported?

Your credit report contains a history of your credit activity. Negative items on your credit report will hurt your credit rating for a number of years.

Accurate negative information generally can be reported for seven years, but there are exceptions:

  • Bankruptcy information can be reported for 10 years;
  • Information reported because of an application for a job with a salary of more than $75,000 has no time limitation;
  • Information reported because of an application for more than $150,000 worth of credit or life insurance has no time limitation;
  • Information concerning a lawsuit or a judgment against you can be reported for seven years or until the statute of limitations runs out, whichever is longer; and
  • Default information concerning U.S. Government insured or guaranteed student loans can be reported for seven years after certain guarantor actions.

Credit Report Scores - Computing Then Insufficient funds?

Your credit report scores are based on factors that appear in your credit reports:

  • Bill payment history (Good: on time and for the full amount)
  • Total outstanding debt (Good: non-mortgage loan payments less than 5% of gross income)
  • Types of debt (Good: mortgage, car loans, Bad: high credit card debt)
  • Length of credit history (Good: 3 or more years of on time payments)
  • Credit inqueries (Bad: many rejected applications)

The Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) prohibits certain factors from being used in determining your credit report score:

The Equal Credit Opportunity Act provides actions for you to take if suspect unauthorized factors are being used to deny you credit.



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