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Credit Repair Companies and Credit Counseling

               

Author: Jeanette Joy Fisher

Let's be crystal clear, right up front. Paying someone to "fix" your credit is a waste of your time and money, since the negative issues that are temporarily removed from your file will only reappear again in a couple of months.

Be careful with credit repair scams.

Most "credit repair" companies really don't help. In fact, you can improve your credit more effectively on your own. By using credit repair companies, you may also be opening yourself up to identity theft, unsolicited emails, and direct mailings. Protect yourself; don't ever share your personal information with strangers or give up your right to handle your own financial affairs as you see fit.

Another important point: credit counselors only promise to get you out of debt, not to improve your credit. Some companies will have you send them a check every month, out of which they're supposed to pay your creditors for you. However, some credit counselors will often pay your bills late, which means that your credit report soon becomes filled with "over 30 days late" notations and your credit score drops even lower than it was.

"Debt negotiators," posing as non-profit organizations, can ruin your credit even further, advising you not to pay your credit card bills at all. They also charge upfront fees, maintenance fees, and monthly fees, all of which are supposed to be placed in a "trust" account. Then, after many months have passed, debt negotiators finally convince creditors to settle for less money than was owed, making yours an "uncollectible account."

That tactic not only ruins your credit, due to the many "over 90 days late" remarks and collections notations, but all the money you supposedly saved -- which was actually money you owed -- will be considered as income by the IRS! In other words, if you owed $20,000 and settled for $12,000, you'd be required to list the $8,000 difference as income!

Credit repair companies promise to help clear up your credit problems. They write letters to credit bureaus, stating that various listed information is false, so the agencies will remove that information while they investigate your account. During that time, the credit repair company sends you a clean credit report, thereby giving you the false impression that you now have good credit. But after you've paid off the credit repair company, you'll discover that all the negative items will soon reappear on your report.

Remember: only incorrect items must be removed from your credit report if they're proven to be false. If the black marks on your credit report are correct, no one can have them removed, regardless of what credit repair companies may try to tell you. Working with collectors to remove negative remarks is possible, but that’s another article.

Some credit repair agencies can probably do a reputable job removing items that are truly incorrect, such as: items after a bankruptcy that should have been removed, double items, children’s items on parents’ reports, and paid-off items that still show past due. Some people really just don't like dealing with this kind of thing, so a reputable credit restoration company can help with these problems.

If you're seeking legitimate financial help to buy a home, the best place to turn is to a mortgage broker. They're the ones who can offer you the best FREE advice for settling credit disputes and problems, so when you find yourself in difficulty, consider using a mortgage broker as your credit counselor.

(c) Copyright 2004, Jeanette J. Fisher. All rights reserved.

Professor Jeanette Fisher, author of Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars, Joy to the Home, and other books teaches Real Estate Investing and Design Psychology. For more articles, tips, reports, newsletters, and sales flyer template, see http://www.doghousetodollhousefordollars.com/pages/5/index.htm


What Debts Show Up In Your Credit Report?

A recent amendment to the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) now requires the credit bureaus to provide consumers a free annual credit report upon request. Access to the free credit reports has been phased in beginning December 2004 in the West and will finally be nationwide by 1 September 2005. This is good news to consumers.

Now each year, you can request a copy of your credit report and check it for inaccuracies and evidence of identity theft. If you discover errors or missing items in your credti report you can petition the credit bureaus to make the necessary corrections (see Credit Reports for additional information.

You are entitled to a free credit report from each of the three natonal consumer credit reporting companies, and many credit counselors recommend requesting all three since the information contained in each of the credit reports may be somewhat different. Also, it is wise to spread out your requests throughout the year so that you can see any sudden changes that might arise (for example case you are a victim of identity theft).

For more detailed information on how to get your free credit report, read Your Access To Free Credit Reports and "Free Credit Reports - Have You Requested Yours?"

What Is Your Current Credit Score?

But while you are now entitled to receive a free credit report from each of the Credit Bureaus, they are NOT required to provide you with your credit score for free and therefore the consumer credit reporting companies do not provide you with a copy of your current credit score when they send you you free credit report. Instead, they charge you to get a copy of your credit score. (For an explanation of the difference between your credit report and your credit score, and what they are used for, see Credit Reports vs Credit Scores

Nevertheless, you can obtain a free copy of your credit score from certain third parties. Click here, if you don't know what your Credit Score is.

As you make corrections to your credit report and begin to pay down your debts, you can watch your credit score rise.


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