Civil Judgments and Your Credit Report: What You Need to Know
Learn how civil judgments affect your credit, whether they still appear on credit reports, and how to handle judgments against you.
Key Takeaways
- Civil judgments no longer appear on credit reports (since 2017)
- Judgments are still public records searchable by anyone
- Unpaid judgments can lead to wage garnishment and liens
- Background checks may still include judgment information
- Satisfying judgments is still important for your financial health
Understanding Civil Judgments
A civil judgment is a court's official decision that you owe money to a creditor who sued you. Before 2017, these appeared on credit reports and significantly damaged credit scores.
How Judgments Happen
- Creditor sues you for unpaid debt
- You fail to respond or lose the case
- Court enters judgment in creditor's favor
- Judgment becomes enforceable
Types of Judgments
- Default judgment: Entered when you don't respond to the lawsuit
- Summary judgment: Court rules without full trial
- Judgment after trial: Court decides after hearing evidence
2017 Credit Reporting Changes
In 2017, the major credit bureaus implemented new data standards that effectively removed civil judgments (and most tax liens) from credit reports.
New Public Records Standards
- Effective date: July 2017
- Requirement: Name, address, SSN/DOB verification
- Judgments affected: Most no longer reported
- Credit impact now: None from report
Why Judgments Were Removed
- Court records often lack SSN or date of birth
- High error rates in matching records to people
- Consumer protection concerns
- NCAP settlement requirements
Good News for Consumers
If you had judgments on your credit report before 2017, they should have been removed. If a judgment still appears, dispute it—bureaus are no longer supposed to report them.
Why Judgments Still Matter
Judgments Are Still Public Records
Even though judgments don't appear on credit reports, they remain:
- Searchable in court records
- Visible in background checks
- Discoverable by landlords and employers
- Accessible to anyone who looks
Enforcement Consequences
Unpaid judgments give creditors powerful collection tools:
- Wage garnishment: Up to 25% of disposable income
- Bank levy: Freeze and seize bank account funds
- Property lien: Attaches to real estate you own
- Asset seizure: Take non-exempt property
Duration
- Judgments last 10-20 years depending on state
- Can often be renewed before expiration
- May accrue interest at legal rate
- Don't "fall off" like credit report items
Judgments Don't Just Disappear
Unlike credit report entries that age off after 7 years, judgments can last decades and be renewed. They won't hurt your credit score but can significantly impact your financial life.
Handling Judgments Against You
Options for Unpaid Judgments
- Pay in full: Satisfies the judgment completely
- Negotiate settlement: Pay less than full amount
- Payment plan: Arrange installments with creditor
- Bankruptcy: May discharge some judgments
- Appeal or vacate: If grounds exist (improper service, etc.)
After Paying
- Get "Satisfaction of Judgment" filed with court
- Public record shows judgment satisfied
- Liens are released
- Keep proof of payment permanently
Vacating a Judgment
In some cases, judgments can be vacated (cancelled):
- You weren't properly served with the lawsuit
- You had valid defenses but couldn't respond
- Statute of limitations had expired
- Fraud or other irregularities
Worried About Old Judgments?
While judgments no longer appear on credit reports, make sure nothing is being reported that shouldn't be. Review your credit reports for accuracy.
Frequently Asked Questions
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