Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

Save products you love, products you own and much more!

Save products icon

Other Membership Benefits:

Savings icon Exclusive Deals for Members Best time to buy icon Best Time to Buy Products Recall tracker icon Recall & Safety Alerts TV screen optimizer icon TV Screen Optimizer and more

    Credit Bureaus Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion Announce Permanent, Free Weekly Access to Credit Reports

    That’s great news for the tens of thousands of people whose reports contain errors

    Laptop with Experian, Equifax, And TransUnion logos with credit gauge in background Photo Illustration: Consumer Reports

    The nation’s three largest credit bureaus—Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion—said this week that they would make permanent consumers’ access to free, weekly credit reports via AnnualCreditReport.com, something the bureaus began at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

    That’s important, says Ryan Reynolds, financial policy analyst at Consumer Reports, because so much of a person’s financial life—the ability to get a car, student, or home loan, a credit card, or even the ability to rent an apartment, sign up for a cell phone plan, or get a job—is affected by information found in their credit report. “Having free access can help consumers ensure their reports are free of errors that could substantially lower their credit score and hurt their financial prospects,” he says.

    More on Credit Reports

    Errors in credit reports are a problem. In fact, they are the most common complaint made by consumers to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau about credit reports, according to a recent CR analysis. What’s more, a nationally representative CR survey (PDF) of 2,174 U.S. adults in January 2022 found that 14 percent of people who had ever checked their credit reports said they found errors.

    “Looking at your own credit report is the only way to ensure that information about you—sold into the stream of commerce without your knowledge or consent—is accurate,” says Ed Mierzwinski, a senior director at U.S. PIRG who advocates on these issues. “These reports should have been free from the beginning, and it only took a record number of complaints to the CFPB to make it happen.”

    What’s more, millions of people have errors in their credit reports, says Chi Chi Wu, senior attorney at the National Consumer Law Center and a consumer advocate in the area of credit reports. “From a landmark Federal Trade Commission study, we can see that in 1 in 20 cases, the error is serious enough to either cause you to be denied credit, or have to pay more for credit.”

    Previously, only one credit report from each of the bureaus was available free of charge on an annual basis (with the exception of Equifax, which had provided six free reports a year after a massive data breach in 2017). Beyond that, the bureaus charged as much as $14 per report.

    “We recognize the important role that credit reports play in people’s financial lives and encourage consumers to regularly check their credit history—an important way of understanding their current credit position and preparing for important future financial milestones,” the CEOs of all three credit bureaus said in a joint statement.

    How to Fix Errors in Your Credit Report

    There are some steps to take if you get your report and find a mistake, and it may take some work.

    Take it from Steven Saxon, 69, in Sonoma County, Calif., who says he grappled with a major error he found five years ago when shopping around for a home improvement loan. During that time, he says his score dropped by an appreciable amount, and upon reviewing his credit report, he discovered a medical bill sent to collections that wasn’t his—but from a provider he’d been to more than a decade earlier. 

    Saxon filed a dispute with the credit bureau, where he’d found the error, and placed more than a dozen calls to the doctor’s office, debt collector, and credit bureau. “I put an awful lot of effort into getting this fixed,” he says, and it paid off. “Doing so raised my score substantially.” 

    Indeed, when a credit report lists a debt in collections as late, it could lower your credit score by up to 100 points, says CR’s Reynolds. (Credit scores are determined by formulas that rely on information found in your credit report.) 

    Other errors, such as debt that has been paid off but is reported as unpaid, or accounts that should be reported as closed but are listed as still open, can also lower a credit score, Reynolds says. 

    If you find an error in your report, here are six steps to take to help remedy the situation.

    File a dispute with each credit bureau. The three major credit bureaus—Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion—don’t communicate with one another, so it’s smart to contact each one. Filing a dispute with each credit bureau, instead of the lender or bank, offers protections governing how quickly it must be handled. It also provides a legal pathway to sue the credit bureaus and creditors or collectors, if necessary. 

    Gather evidence. If you are filing a dispute about debt that’s reported incorrectly, include account statements or payment records. Credit bureaus can dismiss claims without enough backup information as “frivolous.” And resubmitted claims can be denied if they’re considered similar to previous ones.

    Create a paper trail. Write a letter explaining the problem. Avoid using standardized online forms provided by the credit bureaus, which might oversimplify your dispute by requiring you to choose among predetermined check boxes. 

    Send all materials by certified mail. Keep copies for yourself. This makes it easier to ensure that the credit bureaus follow the lawful timelines. Credit bureaus have five days to get the disputed information to the financial institution or debt collector that supplied the information. If that company doesn’t investigate and respond to the dispute in time, the credit bureaus are legally required to delete the information.

    If that doesn’t work, submit a complaint to the CFPB. Explain the error and lack of resolution. Include important dates, amounts, and communications with the credit bureaus and attach any supporting documentation. You can submit a complaint to the CFPB.

    If you lose your dispute, consider working with an experienced attorney. You can sue a credit bureau or financial institution over credit report errors. Find an attorney through the National Association of Consumer Advocates.


    Lisa L. Gill

    Lisa L. Gill is an award-winning investigative reporter. She has been at Consumer Reports since 2008, covering health and food safety—heavy metals in the food supply and foodborne illness—plus healthcare and prescription drug costs, medical debt, and credit scores. Lisa also testified before Congress and the Food and Drug Administration about her work on drug costs and drug safety. She lives in a DIY tiny home, where she gardens during the day and stargazes the Milky Way at night.