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How Long Do Negative Items Stay on Your Credit Report?

Learn exactly how long different types of negative items remain on your credit report under the FCRA, from late payments to bankruptcy.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated November 1, 2024)
7 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Most negative items must be removed after 7 years from original delinquency
  • Bankruptcy can stay 7-10 years depending on chapter
  • Paying a debt does NOT restart the 7-year clock
  • The clock starts from when you first became late, not when it went to collections
  • You can dispute items that have been on your report too long

The 7-Year Rule Explained

Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), most negative information can only remain on your credit report for 7 years. This is known as the "7-year rule" and it applies to most derogatory marks.

The Official Rule (FCRA Section 605)

Credit bureaus cannot report "accounts placed for collection or charged to profit and loss" that are more than 7 years old, measured from the date of the first delinquency.

However, the 7-year rule isn't universal. Different types of negative items have different time limits, and understanding these can help you know when items should fall off—and dispute them if they don't.

Time Limits by Item Type

Credit Report Time Limits

Feature7 Years10 Years
Late Payments
Collections
Charge-Offs
Repossessions
Foreclosures
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Civil Judgments

7-Year Items

  • Late payments - Each late payment notation (30, 60, 90+ days)
  • Collection accounts - Debts sent to collection agencies
  • Charge-offs - Debts written off by the original creditor
  • Repossessions - Vehicle or property repossessions
  • Foreclosures - Home foreclosure proceedings
  • Settled accounts - Debts settled for less than owed
  • Chapter 13 bankruptcy - Reorganization bankruptcy

10-Year Items

  • Chapter 7 bankruptcy - Liquidation bankruptcy
  • Chapter 11 bankruptcy - Business reorganization bankruptcy

Items with No Time Limit

  • Positive account history - Paid accounts in good standing can remain indefinitely
  • Accounts you haven't closed - Open accounts with good history stay on

Good News About Tax Liens

As of 2018, all three major credit bureaus stopped reporting tax liens. Even if you have an unpaid tax lien, it should no longer appear on your credit reports from Experian, Equifax, or TransUnion.

Have items that should have fallen off?

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When Does the Clock Start?

This is crucial: The 7-year clock starts from the date of first delinquencyon the original account—not when it went to collections or was sold to another company.

Clock Start Dates

  • Late payments: Date the payment was due
  • Collections: Date you first fell behind on the ORIGINAL account
  • Charge-offs: Date of first delinquency leading to charge-off
  • Bankruptcy: Date of filing (Chapter 7) or discharge (Chapter 13)

Collectors Cannot Reset the Clock

Some shady collectors try to report a recent "date opened" to make old debts appear newer. This is illegal. If you see a collection with dates that don't match when you originally fell behind, dispute it immediately.

Example

If you stopped paying a credit card in January 2020, the 7-year clock started then— even if:

  • The bank charged it off in July 2020
  • It was sold to Collector A in 2021
  • Collector A sold it to Collector B in 2023
  • You made a payment in 2024

The item must still be removed by January 2027 (7 years from original delinquency), regardless of all subsequent activity.

Can You Remove Items Early?

Yes! You don't have to wait the full 7 years. Here are legitimate ways to remove negative items sooner:

1. Dispute Inaccurate Information

If any information is wrong—balance, dates, account number, whether it's even your account—you can dispute it under the FCRA. Items that can't be verified must be removed.

2. Goodwill Requests

For paid accounts, you can ask the creditor to remove the negative mark as a goodwill gesture. This works best when you have a good payment history otherwise.

3. Pay-for-Delete

Some collectors will agree to delete an account from your credit report in exchange for payment. Always get this agreement in writing before paying.

4. Wait for Automatic Removal

Monitor your reports and dispute any items that remain past their removal date. Bureaus sometimes fail to remove items automatically.

Don't Wait 7 Years

Our AI identifies which items on your credit report can be disputed for errors or removed through other strategies. Most disputes resolve in 30-45 days.

Frequently Asked Questions

No, paying a collection does not restart the 7-year reporting period. The clock is based on the original delinquency date, not payment activity.
Yes, if the information is inaccurate, you can dispute it at any time. Accurate negative items can sometimes be removed through goodwill requests or pay-for-delete negotiations.
Collectors may update the 'date reported' or 'last activity' date, but this doesn't change when the item must be removed. The removal date is based on the original delinquency.
Not always. Dates can vary between bureaus due to reporting differences. Check all three reports and dispute any dates that seem incorrect.
Dispute it with the credit bureaus. Reference the original delinquency date and FCRA Section 605, which requires removal after 7 years. If they don't remove it, file a CFPB complaint.

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