How to Remove Inaccurate Items from Your Credit Report (Step-by-Step) US 2026

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Debt & Credit Score Mastery

1 in 5
Americans has an error on their credit report (FTC data)
1 in 20
Has an error serious enough to cause denial or higher rate
30 Days
Legal deadline — bureaus MUST investigate under the FCRA
+50–100
Points score improvement after one corrected error

Did you know 1 in 5 Americans has an error on their credit report — and most of them have no idea? These are not minor typos. A single inaccuracy can drop your credit score by 50 to 100 points, cause you to be denied for a mortgage or car loan, raise your interest rate significantly, and even affect job applications in certain industries.

The good news: under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), you have a legal right to dispute and remove inaccurate items from your credit report — completely free of charge — and bureaus must respond within 30 days by law. This step-by-step guide covers exactly how to do it.


Watch the full step-by-step guide on GroYourWealth — How to Remove Inaccurate Items from Your Credit Report (US 2026)

How Common Are Credit Report Errors?

According to the Federal Trade Commission, one in five consumers — 20% — has at least one error on one of their three credit reports. One in twenty has an error serious enough to cause them to be denied credit or to pay a significantly higher interest rate.

The three credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — each maintain a completely separate file on you. An error on one report may not appear on another, which is why you must check all three.

🔑 Your Free Legal Right

Under the FCRA you are entitled to one free credit report from each bureau every 12 months at AnnualCreditReport.com — the only federally authorised site. You can request all three at once or stagger one every four months for year-round monitoring. No credit card required.

4 Types of Errors to Look For

Go through every section of your report carefully and highlight anything that looks wrong, unfamiliar, or outdated. There are four main categories to check.

Error TypeWhat to Look ForKey Risk
Personal InformationWrong name, address, date of birth, or Social Security numberMixed file — someone else’s negative data on your report
Account ErrorsAccounts not yours · wrong balance or limit · duplicates · closed accounts shown as openInflated utilisation · lower score
Payment HistoryOn-time payments marked as late or missed · derogatory marks that should be removedBiggest score damage — 35% of FICO score
Outdated NegativesMost negatives must be removed after 7 years · Bankruptcies after 10 yearsIf still showing past deadline — illegal, must be deleted

The 6-Step Dispute Process

1

Get All Three Free Credit Reports

Go to AnnualCreditReport.com — the only federally authorised site under the FCRA. Request all three reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Download or print each one. Go through every section: personal information, accounts, payment history, hard inquiries, and public records. Highlight every item that looks incorrect, unfamiliar, or outdated. Keep a written log with the account name, account number, and exactly what is wrong.

2

Gather Your Evidence

Collect documentation for each error before filing a single dispute. Strong disputes include: bank statements showing on-time payments incorrectly reported as late · letters from creditors confirming closed accounts or paid balances · court documents for discharged bankruptcies or resolved judgements · identity documents if personal information is wrong. Always send photocopies only — never originals. Keep all originals yourself.

3

File Your Dispute With the Credit Bureau

File directly with each bureau that has the error — Equifax.com, Experian.com, or TransUnion.com — using their online dispute portal (fastest), by certified mail with return receipt (best paper trail), or by phone (least preferred — always follow up in writing). Your dispute letter must include: full name · address · date of birth · SSN · the specific item disputed · why it is wrong · copies of supporting documents. Under the FCRA, the bureau must investigate within 30 days — or 45 days if you provide additional information during the process.

4

Dispute With the Original Creditor Simultaneously

Contact the original creditor — the company that reported the data — at the same time as the bureau. This creates a parallel dispute track and often speeds up resolution. Write to the creditor’s customer service address (not billing). Under the FCRA, any furnisher (company reporting data) that receives notice of a dispute is legally required to investigate and correct inaccurate information — and must notify all three bureaus if they confirm an error.

5

Track Your Dispute — 30-Day Clock

Keep a dispute tracking log: date filed · method used · confirmation number · expected response date. If the bureau cannot verify the disputed item within 30 days, they are legally required to remove it. After the investigation you receive written results and a free updated credit report if any change was made. Score improvements from corrections typically reflect within 30 to 60 days.

6

If Rejected — Escalate

If your dispute is rejected, you have four options: (1) Add a 100-word consumer statement to your report — future lenders see your side. (2) File a complaint at ConsumerFinance.gov (CFPB) — federal authority over bureaus. (3) Escalate to the FTC at FTC.gov. (4) Consult a consumer protection attorney — under the FCRA, wilful failure to correct an error entitles you to actual damages, statutory damages up to $1,000 per violation, plus attorney fees. Many attorneys take these cases on contingency.

What to Expect — Dispute Timeline

Day 1
File dispute online or via certified mail — save all confirmation numbers
Day 2–5
Bureau acknowledges receipt — you receive a confirmation reference
Day 30
FCRA legal deadline — bureau must complete investigation by this date
Day 30–45
Written results sent to you + free updated credit report (if any change made)
Day 30–60
If item corrected or removed — score improvement reflected within this window
⚖️ Key FCRA Rule

If the bureau cannot verify the disputed item within 30 days, they are legally required to remove it from your report — even if no error is confirmed. This is one of the most powerful protections the FCRA provides.

What You Can and Cannot Remove

This distinction is critical — and understanding it will protect you from credit repair fraud.

✅ You Can Remove

  • Factually inaccurate items — wrong dates, amounts, or account details
  • Accounts that do not belong to you — mixed file errors
  • Negative items past the legal reporting window (7 years most, 10 years bankruptcy)
  • Items the bureau cannot verify within 30 days

❌ You Cannot Remove

  • Accurate late payments — genuine missed payments stay 7 years
  • Legitimate collections — real debts you owe cannot be erased
  • Valid bankruptcies within the reporting window
  • Any accurate negative information — regardless of how it affects your score

  • ⚠️ Credit Repair Fraud Warning Any company claiming they can remove accurate negative information from your credit report is committing fraud. Everything a paid credit repair company can legally do, you can do yourself — completely free. Never pay for credit repair services.

Credit Score Impact Estimator

Use this tool to estimate how much a corrected credit report error could improve your score and what it could save you on your next loan.

📊 Credit Report Error Impact Calculator




Error type selected
Estimated score improvement after correction
Estimated interest rate before correction
Estimated interest rate after correction
Estimated total interest savings over loan term

Free Tools and Resources

Everything you need to dispute errors and monitor your credit is available at no cost. Never pay a credit repair company — you can do everything they do, yourself, for free.

ToolWhat It DoesCost
AnnualCreditReport.comOfficial free reports from all 3 bureaus — federally authorisedFree
Equifax.comFree dispute portal + identity theft alertsFree
Experian.comFree dispute portal + ongoing credit monitoringFree
TransUnion.comFree dispute portal + credit lock featureFree
ConsumerFinance.gov (CFPB)Federal complaint portal — if bureaus fail to respond correctlyFree
FTC.govFederal Trade Commission escalation + identity theft reportsFree
Credit KarmaOngoing free credit monitoring — alerts for any new changesFree
MyFICO.comSee your actual FICO score — the score most lenders usePaid (free trial available)

Your Action Plan — Start This Week

1

This Week: Download All Three Reports

Go to AnnualCreditReport.com and download your Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion reports. Read every line. Highlight every error, unfamiliar item, or outdated entry.

2

Gather Evidence

Bank statements · creditor letters · court documents · identity proof if needed. Prepare photocopies of everything relevant to each error found.

3

File Disputes Online + With Creditors

Use the dispute portal at each bureau’s website. Simultaneously send a written dispute letter to the original creditor’s customer service address. This dual-track approach speeds up resolution.

4

Track — 30-Day Deadline

Log every dispute with date, method, and confirmation number. Bureau has 30 days to respond under the FCRA. If they cannot verify, they must remove.

5

Monitor Monthly

Set up free ongoing monitoring via Credit Karma or Experian’s free tier. Check for any new changes monthly. One corrected error can add 50–100 points to your score — potentially saving thousands on your next loan.

Key Resources — All Free

GroYourWealth · groyourwealth.com · Daily Money Education

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Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.

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