Credit Repair

Credit repair is a three-part process. The first is obtaining and then fixing your credit report. The next is getting your finances organized in order to conquer debt. The final stage is then re-building your credit to the point where you are eligible for important secured loans such as a mortgage. One a person might utilize credit repair is if they have been a victim of identity theft or stolen credit or bank cards. Thieves can cause a lot of problems for someone's credit report, and if this has happened to you, then you should quickly order a copy of your credit report and begin to repair the damage. Credit repair can also be beneficial to someone who has just experienced large medical bills. Because the insurance companies are not always on time with their payments, or sometimes even lose the invoices, your credit can suffer. Your report can be marked with late payments or non-payments due to no fault of your own. In these instances, credit repair is a legitimate way to remove these potentially harmful marks from your credit.

Fixing A Credit Report
The first use of legitimate credit repair is when the credit bureaus make a mistake. With the millions of credit reports, sometimes the credit reporting agencies accidentally attribute the wrong data to the wrong reports. It's easy to incorrectly write one letter for another, or reverse the numbers on a social security number. If this happens to you, the results could be that someone else's credit report remarks end up on yours. For example, if your name is Jane Doe, but the credit bureau attributes Janie Doe's marks on your report, all of her late payments, charge offs, tax liens, or anything else could end up on your report. This is one of the main functions of credit repair - to erase any false information that is on your report.

Credit repair isn't about removing true information from your credit report. Instead, it is a method used by people who have false and damaging data on their credit report. If you feel that you have information on your credit report that either isn't your own, or in some way is unfair because it was caused by someone else, you should contact the credit reporting bureaus immediately to have it removed.

Conquering Debt
After clearing your credit report of inaccurate information, the next step to credit repair is getting your finances in order in order to start making headway on accumulated debt. This may mean consolidating debts, negotiating debts with your creditors, seeking credit counseling and getting your finances organized. During this stage it is critical to make payments on time and to do everything you can do get your payments down to a manageable amount.

Rebuilding Credit
While steadily reducing the amount of your debt, there are several safe ways to build your credit back to the point where you will be eligible for important kinds of loans like mortgage and auto loans, including getting a secured credit card, using a gas station credit card or finding a co-signer on a credit card with a small maximum. During this time, it is important not to rely on credit at all, and instead use the various means for building credit as a step up the credit ladder.

Summary
Credit repair is a three-part process: fixing your credit report, conquering debt, and rebuilding credit. Credit repair companies claiming to be able to erase true items on your report are likely scams. Fixing a credit report involves removing inaccurate information on the report. Getting your finances in order to steadily remove debt is a critical second step to repairing credit. There are several safe ways to rebuild your credit, but it is important not to rely on credit during that time.

FREE CREDIT REPAIR CASE EVALUATION

The Young Law Group, PLLC
80 Orville Drive, Suite 100
Bohemia, New York 11716
Phone: 631-244-1433
Fax: 631-589-0949

Our firm helps you become part of the credit conversation through time-tested services that incorporate innovative dispute methodologies, creditor interventions, and other credit repair methods that make full use of your credit rights as established by the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and other federal laws. While these laws give you a way to address credit issues on your own, acting on them takes more than a letter, a stamp and crossed fingers, it takes experience and perseverance. Many who try to repair their own credit are discouraged by a series of road blocks that lead them to end their fight for fair credit in frustration and despair.

The information on this Young Law Group, PLLC website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this or associated pages, documents, comments, answers, emails, or other communications should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information on this website is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing of this information does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.  The Young Law Group, PLLC is a New York licensed law firm.  The Young Law Group, PLLC concentrates in bankruptcy law and in foreclosure solutions.  The Young Law Group, PLLC is a debt relief agency as such term is defined under the United States Bankruptcy Code.