How to Freeze Your Child's Credit: Protect Kids from Identity Theft
Learn how to freeze your child's credit to protect them from identity theft. Step-by-step guide for each credit bureau with documentation requirements.
Key Takeaways
- Children are frequent targets of identity theft
- Fraud often goes undetected for years
- You can freeze your child's credit for free
- Documentation requirements vary by bureau
- Check periodically to ensure the freeze is active
Why Freeze Your Child's Credit?
Child identity theft is a growing problem. Criminals target children because their Social Security numbers are "clean" with no credit history, and the theft often goes undetected for years until the child applies for their first credit card, student loan, or job.
Why Children Are Targets
- Clean Social Security numbers with no credit history
- Years may pass before anyone checks
- Parents don't think to monitor children's credit
- SSNs exposed in data breaches, school records, medical records
The Danger of Undetected Fraud
Child identity theft typically isn't discovered until years later— often when the child turns 18 and applies for credit. By then, the damage includes years of fraudulent accounts, collections, and potentially ruined credit.
When to Freeze Your Child's Credit
Consider freezing your child's credit:
- At birth: As soon as you have their Social Security number
- After a data breach: If their school, doctor, or other organization was breached
- If you suspect fraud: Someone may have already used their identity
- Proactively: Even without specific concerns, it's good protection
How to Freeze at Each Bureau
You must freeze your child's credit at each bureau separately. The process is more complex than adult freezes because you need to prove your relationship to the child.
Experian
Check if a File Exists
Contact Experian to check if your child has a credit file. If one exists unexpectedly, that may indicate fraud.
Request a Freeze
Submit a freeze request with required documents to Experian's minor freeze address: P.O. Box 9554, Allen, TX 75013.
Wait for Confirmation
Experian will process your request and send confirmation. Save any PINs or passwords they provide.
Equifax
Create a Record
Equifax may need to create a record for your child before placing a freeze (if none exists).
Submit Documentation
Mail required documents to: Equifax Information Services LLC, P.O. Box 105788, Atlanta, GA 30348.
Confirm the Freeze
Follow up to ensure the freeze was placed and save any confirmation numbers.
TransUnion
Download the Form
Get the protected consumer freeze form from TransUnion's website for minors and other protected consumers.
Complete and Mail
Fill out the form and mail with required documents to: TransUnion, P.O. Box 160, Woodlyn, PA 19094.
Track Your Request
TransUnion will process and confirm. Keep records of all correspondence.
Documentation Needed
You'll typically need to provide:
Required Documents
- Child's birth certificate: Copy required
- Child's Social Security card: Copy required
- Your government ID: Driver's license or passport
- Proof of address: Utility bill, bank statement
Additional Documents May Include
- Proof of guardianship (if not biological parent)
- Court documents (for legal guardians)
- Adoption papers (if applicable)
- Power of attorney documents
Keep Copies
Make copies of all documents before sending. Use certified mail with return receipt so you have proof the bureaus received your request.
Managing the Freeze
Keep Records
Save all confirmation letters and PINs in a secure location. Your child will need these when they're old enough to manage their own credit.
Check Periodically
Every year or two, contact each bureau to confirm the freeze is still active. Some parents check when filing taxes since that's when SSN fraud is sometimes discovered.
Before Your Child Turns 18
As your child approaches adulthood, help them understand their credit file. They'll need to learn how to manage the freeze, check their credit reports, and eventually lift the freeze when needed.
Protect Your Child's Credit Future
If you discover fraudulent accounts on your child's credit, our platform can help you dispute them. We generate letters and mail them for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
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