Credit Strategies

How to Dispute Errors on Your Credit Report

Learn how to identify inaccuracies and remove items that shouldn’t be there.

Jeri Toliver

Last Updated: March 20, 2025

Hey! I'm Jeri!

I'm a financial educator and speaker known for simplifying complex credit and funding strategies. I've helped thousands of individuals and small business owners get the credit they deserve.


Connect With Me

If your credit report has mistakes — and most reports do — you are not stuck with them.

Federal law gives you the right to challenge anything that is inaccurate, outdated, or unverified. And once you understand the process, disputing errors becomes a simple and powerful way to raise your credit score.

This guide breaks everything down step-by-step so you know exactly what to look for, how to dispute it, and how to protect yourself moving forward.

Step 1: Pull All Three Credit Reports

Before you can dispute anything, you need to see exactly what’s being reported.

Get your free reports from AnnualCreditReport.com

Pull:

  • Experian
  • Equifax
  • TransUnion

Why this matters:

Errors don’t always show up on all three reports. You must review all reports to get the full picture.

Step 2: Identify What’s Wrong

Go through each section of your report and look for anything that doesn’t match your real history. The law requires that all information be:

✅ Accurate
✅ Complete
✅ Current
✅ Verifiable

If it fails any of these, it can be disputed.

Look for:

  • Wrong personal information
  • Accounts that aren’t yours
  • Duplicate accounts
  • Incorrect balances or late payments
  • Wrong dates (open date, status date)
  • Accounts showing late after being paid on time
  • Paid / settled accounts still showing open
  • Collection accounts beyond the statute of limitations
  • Accounts included in bankruptcy still showing active
  • Fraudulent inquiries
  • Old negative items past the reporting period

If it looks off, highlight it.

Step 3: Prepare Your Evidence

You don’t need a courtroom’s worth of documents... just simple proof.

Depending on the error, helpful documents include:

  • Bank statements
  • Payment confirmations
  • Letters from creditors
  • Identity theft reports
  • Police reports
  • Bankruptcy papers
  • Settlement agreements
  • Screenshots of incorrect reporting

Anything that proves your point strengthens your dispute.

Step 4: File Your Dispute With the Credit Bureaus

You can dispute items with each bureau that reports the error.

How to Submit Disputes

You can dispute:

  • Online
  • By mail
  • By phone

But mail is the strongest because it creates a paper trail, and it enables you to fully exercise your consumer rights.

Your dispute should include:

  • Which item you’re disputing
  • Why it’s inaccurate
  • What you want them to do (correct or delete)
  • Copies of supporting documents
  • A copy of your report with items highlighted

Send everything certified mail with tracking so you have proof of delivery.

Step 5: Wait for the Investigation

Once your dispute is received, the bureau has:

  • 30 days to investigate
  • 5 additional days to notify you of the results

They will:

  • Contact the furnisher (the creditor)
  • Request verification
  • Review the documentation
  • Update or delete the item

If the creditor cannot verify the account within the time limit, the bureau must delete the item.

Step 6: Review Your Results

When the investigation is done, you’ll receive updated reports showing:

  • Corrections
  • Deletions
  • Items that stayed
  • Explanations for anything not removed

If the error is fixed:

Congrats! Save this updated report for your records.

If it is not fixed:

Don’t panic. Your rights give you multiple options:

  • File a second dispute with more evidence
  • Dispute directly with the creditor (furnisher)
  • Add a consumer statement
  • File a complaint with the CFPB
  • Request method-of-verification

Persistence pays off. Many “verified” items get removed after a stronger second attempt.

Step 7: Dispute Directly With Creditors 

Sometimes the fastest way to get an item corrected is to go straight to the source.

A direct dispute should include:

  • Your full name & address
  • The account in question
  • Why the reporting is wrong
  • Supporting documents

The creditor must investigate within 30 days and update all bureaus accordingly.

Step 8: Follow Up and Monitor Your Credit

This is more common than you think. Your score can drop because a creditor reported:

  • A payment late that wasn’t
  • A balance higher than it actually is
  • A duplicate account
  • Someone else’s information entirely

How to Fix It

  • Pull all three reports: Experian, TransUnion, Equifax
  • Dispute inaccuracies with supporting documents
  • Follow up every 30 days

A successful dispute can raise your score instantly.

What You Should NOT Do

A few important warnings:

🚫 Try not dispute everything at once. It will look suspicious.

🚫 Do not dispute accurate negative information. It won’t be removed.

🚫 Avoid online disputes if you’re challenging something major. You may accidentally waive your rights.

🚫 Do not ignore mail from creditors or bureaus. Deadlines matter.

Final Takeaway

You have the legal right to challenge anything that is inaccurate, outdated, misleading, or unverified. 

When you understand how to dispute errors properly, you take full control of your financial reputation.

The dispute process isn’t about fighting.

It’s about making sure your report reflects your truth, and not someone else’s mistake.

With a clean credit report, you can rebuild faster, get approved easier, and move forward with clarity and confidence.

Get Matched With a Smart Credit Certified Consultant

Get personalized guidance, expert credit strategy, and a fundable roadmap built for your business.

Helping you gain better credit, better opportunities, and a better lifestyle.

Contact Us

5203 Juan Tabo Blvd STE 2B

Albuquerque New Mexico 87111

---------------

Hours: Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Central

Phone: (888) 844-8833

Email: [email protected]

More Links

Terms & Conditions

Privacy Policy

We Value Your Privacy and Do Not Share Your Personal Information

© Copyright 2025  Smart Credit Solutions.  All Rights Reserved.