Archive for April, 2009

Credit Repair and Your Identity – By Jim Kemish

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Identity Theft Concerns

There are a number of reasons you might have a concern about the illicit use of your identity. A lost wallet, unexplained accounts on your credit report, mysterious transactions on a credit card; these can all give rise to very reasonable worries about fraudulent activity. These events may be of little consequence, or they may be quite serious. Either way, there are a variety of credit repair solutions that you should implement immediately. Credit repair solutions include investigative, preventative, and curative, and all three should be employed.

Investigate the Issue

If you discover activity on your credit report that is not yours it may be the result of a file merger error. This means that someone else’s credit data has been merged with yours. As awful as this may sound, it is pretty innocent and has an easy credit repair cure. So, before you jump to conclusions about identity theft take a few minutes to investigate. Get copies of all three credit reports, circle the unknown accounts, call the creditors, and ask them if they have an account in your name. If they tell you that they have no record of the suspect account you are a victim of a file merger error. This is easily cured with a bit of credit repair. Just write to the credit bureaus telling them that someone else’s credit is showing on your report, and ask them to correct the error. Be sure to provide your identification. File merger errors are surprisingly common and the credit bureaus will most likely resolve the problem for you right away.

Cure the Problem

If on the other hand, the creditor acknowledges that the questionable account is yours, you may have been a victim of identity theft and should implement a more serious credit repair cure right away. The Fair Credit Reporting Act provides a very powerful solution for identity theft victims. You need to go the police station with a copy of your credit report and ask them to provide you with an Identity Theft Report. You will need to send this to the credit bureaus along with your identification and a signed statement affirming that the accounts in question have nothing to do with any transaction of yours. The credit bureaus will block the suspect accounts with a few days and initiate an investigation.

Prevention of Identity Theft

If you have been a victim of identity theft, or are just concerned about preventing the problem from occurring there are two easy and effective credit repair solutions. The credit bureaus offer a simple warning system called a Fraud Alert. A Fraud Alert is a statement inserted into your credit report requesting that prospective lenders contact you before extending credit. All you need to do is ask the credit bureaus to include this statement on your report, provide them with a contact phone number, and you are all set. There is no charge and the alert will remain on your credit report for 90 days. After 90 days you may extend it if wish. You may also cancel it at any time if you feel that the threat has passed. Fraud Alerts, however, are not foolproof, and some lenders may ignore the alert and extend credit regardless. An excellent ancillary credit repair solution you should implement simultaneously with your Fraud Alert is credit monitoring. Credit monitoring is a service offered by the credit bureaus which will alert you to any activity on your credit including inquiries. You can expect to pay less than $20 per month for this service. If someone attempts to use your identity you will be contact in time to avert the issue.

Consult a Professional

If you have concerns about fraudulent use of your identity you should consult a credit repair professional. Most credit repair services offer a free consultation which you should take advantage of. There may be considerations other than have been mentioned in this article, and every situation is unique. As important as your credit is your should always make informed choices.

Copyright © 2009 James W. Kemish. All Content. All Rights Reserved.

About the Author

Jim Kemish, a nationally recognized consumer advocate, is the president and founder of Sky Blue Credit Repair, a leading credit repair service since 1989.

Jim is also a regular contributor to The Credit Repair Blog, a prominent consumer resource.

Five Best Credit Repair Tactics – By Ian Webber

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Plan Your Credit Repair Effort

Are you planning to make an effort at credit repair? Make sure to do it right. An informed effort will produce amazing results, and subtle details can make a world of difference. Take a bit of time to plan your attack and you will prevail. Here are my five favorite credit repair tactics proven to produce solid and significant results.

1. Don’t Wait to Rebuild Your Credit

If a stretch of hard times have left you with no open accounts it is tempting to postpone rebuilding credit until your credit repair project has borne fruit. You may think that if you wait until your credit is clean you are less likely to get denied. Unfortunately, the logic is flawed. Your credit scores will not recover if you don’t have active accounts. And new credit takes time to yield positive credit score results. If you put off opening new accounts you will be disappointed with your credit repair project. Now is the time to start rebuilding. Open two secured credit cards. Do it today. Once you receive them, use them, and keep them active. But be careful to manage the balances properly.

2. Manage Your Revolving Balances

The FICO scoring model places great weight on the relationship between your credit card balances and your card limits. This factor receives extra weight on accounts that are less than a year old. So if you have recently opened new secured credit cards as part of your credit repair strategy this issue is extra important. Your credit score will be rewarded if you keep your balance low, and conversely you will be punished if your balance drifts upward. Optimize your credit score by keeping your balances under 20 percent of the cards total limit. For example, if you have a three hundred dollar limit, keep the balance below sixty dollars.

3. Dispute Intelligently

If you are going to manage your own disputes instead of hiring one of the available credit repair services there are some caveats. Keep your disputes simple. The credit bureaus do not want to hear your story. Limit your communication to the bare minimum. If you have found an account on your report that does not belong to you, just list the account and say that the account is not yours. One more strategic pointer; don’t give up. If you do not get the response you want the first time, dispute again. This time state clearly that you are not happy with the first results and you demand that they have the creditor research the account. Stand your ground.

4. Learn Your Reporting Period Limits

When you review your credit reports and are planning your credit repair effort you must examine the reporting dates. Derogatory information, in general, can report for seven years. But there are exceptions and specific ways of counting the dates. Understanding the rules will give you the edge you need to succeed. Many people are not aware that the reporting period clock starts ticking on the date of the original default with the original creditor. Reporting periods never start with the reporting date of subsequent collectors. There are many cases where you will need to calculate your dates very carefully. Take nothing for granted.

5. Challenge Collectors

The most egregious offenders of credit reporting rules are collectors. You must examine all collection accounts as part of your credit repair effort. Don’t believe your eyes. This is a case where skepticism will pay dividends. Collectors buy and sell debt on a regular basis. Did you know that if a collector sells a debt to another collector or returns the account to the original creditor they are supposed to withdraw the account from your credit report? In fact, this rarely happens and non-compliant collections linger on your report for years depressing your scores needlessly.

And When in Doubt

If you are too busy to give your credit repair effort the careful attention that it deserves, just reach out for help. There are many legitimate credit repair services that will insure that every possible method of improving your credit is explored and implemented. Credit repair is a detail business, but you don’t need to be intimidated. Whichever route you take help is nearby if you need it. Good luck!

Copyright © 2009 Ian Webber. All Content. All Rights Reserved.

About the Author

Ian Webber is an expert in consumer law and credit repair. Ian is a graduate of the London School of Economics and The University of Chicago where he earned his LLM.

Ian consults with one of the leading online credit repair services and is currently based in Florida.