Credit Disputes

15 Common Credit Report Errors You Should Dispute Immediately

Learn the most common credit report errors, how to identify them, and why disputing these mistakes can significantly improve your credit score.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated December 10, 2024)
11 min read

Key Takeaways

  • 1 in 4 consumers have credit report errors
  • Check all three bureau reports separately
  • Some errors significantly impact your score
  • Documentation strengthens your dispute
  • You have the legal right to accurate reporting

Credit Report Error Statistics

  • Consumers with errors: 25% (1 in 4)
  • Material errors: 5% (1 in 20)
  • Investigation time: 30-45 days
  • Your right: Free disputes under FCRA

Personal Information Errors

1. Wrong Name or Name Variations

Misspellings, wrong suffixes (Jr./Sr.), or someone else's name entirely. This can indicate mixed files or identity theft.

2. Incorrect Address

Addresses you've never lived at may signal mixed files or fraud. Old addresses are normal, but unknown ones should be disputed.

3. Wrong Social Security Number

If your SSN is listed incorrectly, your file may be mixed with someone else's. This requires immediate attention.

4. Incorrect Date of Birth

Wrong birth dates can cause file mixing with similarly-named people. Verify this is correct on all three reports.

Personal Info Errors = Red Flag

Incorrect personal information often means accounts that aren't yours may be on your report. Check carefully for unfamiliar accounts when you see personal info errors.

Account Information Errors

5. Accounts That Aren't Yours

The most damaging error. Could be identity theft, mixed files, or data entry mistakes. Dispute immediately.

6. Incorrect Account Balances

Balances that don't match your records affect utilization. A $0 balance showing as $5,000 can tank your score.

7. Wrong Credit Limits

If your limit is reported lower than actual, your utilization appears higher. Check this on all credit cards.

8. Incorrect Opening Dates

Wrong dates affect your credit age calculation. Older accounts should show correct, older dates.

9. Duplicate Accounts

Same account appearing twice (often from debt sales) counts negative items multiple times. One debt = one entry.

Account Status Errors

10. Wrong Account Status

Paid accounts showing as unpaid, current accounts showing as late. Status directly impacts how the account affects your score.

11. Incorrect Late Payment Records

Payments reported as late that were actually on time. Even one wrong late payment can significantly hurt your score.

12. Closed Accounts Showing Open

Accounts you closed should show as closed. Wrong status can affect utilization calculations and number of open accounts.

13. Paid Collections Still Showing Balances

After paying a collection, balance should show $0. If it still shows the original amount, dispute it.

Get Documentation First

Before disputing, gather proof: payment records, account statements, letters from creditors. Documentation significantly increases dispute success rates.

Other Common Errors

14. Outdated Negative Information

Most negative items should fall off after 7 years (10 for bankruptcy). Items past this date should be disputed for removal.

15. Incorrect Authorized User Status

Showing as joint holder instead of authorized user makes you liable. Or authorized user accounts not appearing at all.

What to Do When You Find Errors

  • Document the error (screenshot, note details)
  • Gather supporting documentation
  • File disputes with each bureau showing the error
  • Send disputes via certified mail
  • Follow up if not resolved in 30-45 days

Errors Can Be Fixed

The FCRA gives you the right to accurate credit reporting. Bureaus must investigate disputes and correct verified errors. Be persistent and document everything.

Find Errors on Your Credit Report

Our platform helps you identify potential errors and generates professional dispute letters to get them corrected.

Frequently Asked Questions

Studies suggest 1 in 4 consumers have errors on their credit reports. About 1 in 20 have errors significant enough to affect loan terms. Checking your report regularly is essential.
Focus on errors affecting your score: wrong account status (current vs. late), incorrect balances, accounts that aren't yours, duplicate accounts, and incorrectly dated negative items.
Credit bureaus must investigate within 30-45 days. Simple errors may be fixed quickly; complex ones may require multiple disputes. Plan for 1-3 months for resolution.
Dispute with each bureau showing the error. Bureaus don't share dispute information with each other. An error on Experian won't be fixed on Equifax unless you dispute with both.
You can re-dispute with additional documentation, file a complaint with the CFPB, add a consumer statement to your report, or consult a consumer law attorney for potential FCRA violations.

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