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6 Myths
about Bad Credit
Myth #1
When I pay
off a past-due account, such as charge off or collection account, it
will show "paid" and will no longer be negative. It is practically
impossible to restore your credit without somehow satisfying your
outstanding debts.
However,
the act of paying off a debt actually hurts your credit. Negative credit
is allowed to stay on the credit report for a maximum of seven years,
except for bankruptcy which may remain up to ten years. This seven year
clock begins ticking on the "date of last activity," or, in other words,
when the last action took place on the account. By paying an
outstanding, delinquent debt you will change the account status to "paid
collection," "paid was late," or "paid was charged off"-- which will
stand out as a very negative listing.
Furthermore, you will create a new date of last activity on the day you
settle the account. The seven year clock will reset and begin all over
again.
Myth #2
If I
succeed in deleting a negative item, it will just come right back on my
credit report. The credit bureaus have very cleverly spread this myth
through the news media and even government regulators. In truth, the
credit bureaus will often temporarily delete a negative listing if they
haven't heard back from the credit grantor after approximately thirty
days.
If the
credit grantor reports in tardy, say after six weeks and verifies the
negative listing, the credit bureau will often reinsert the negative
listing on the credit report. This is often known as the "soft delete."
Eventually, though, the creditor simply fails to respond to respond and
the negative listing is permanently deleted. If the item is verified by
the credit grantor, either before thirty days or after, the account may
still be challenged again at some future time.
Myth #3
There are
some types of negative listings, such as bankruptcies and foreclosures,
that are impossible to remove from the credit report. There is no type
of negative listing that hasn't been removed from a credit report a
thousand times.
Some types
of negative listings, such as bankruptcy or unpaid debts, are certainly
more difficult to remove from the credit report, but this has more to do
with the operational systems of the credit bureaus than it has to do
with the severity of the bad credit item. For example, judgments and tax
liens are severely negative listings, yet are easier negative listings
to remove.
Myth #4
Disputing
the credit report is easy and any consumer can do it himself for the
price of a few postage stamps. Disputing the credit report is easy.
Getting results from the credit bureaus is amazingly difficult, complex,
and infuriating.
It isn't a
coincidence that the Federal Trade Commission receives more complaints
against credit bureaus than any other type of business. Remember, the
credit bureaus are primarily interested in protecting their profits.
Investigating your challenge consumes these profits. Short of sparking
mass numbers of lawsuits, the credit bureaus will do everything in their
power to discourage consumers from making progress with their credit
restoration.
Myth #5
If I
declare bankruptcy, I can begin my credit report all over with a clean
slate. Many bankruptcy attorneys do not adequately understand of explain
the effects of bankruptcy to their clients. Stated simply, bankruptcy is
to the credit rating what the nuclear bomb is to war.
When you
file for bankruptcy, every credit account that you decide to include in
bankruptcy will become an "included in bankruptcy" account.
Additionally, a bankruptcy filing and bankruptcy discharge listing will
appear in the court records section of your credit report. Because so
many negative items are attached to the bankruptcy, it becomes very
difficult to remove all trace of the bad credit. If at all possible, you
should avoid bankruptcy.
Myth #6
If you are
not satisfied with the results of your credit bureau challenge, you may
file a "100 word statement" on your credit report explaining your side
of the story. Creditors will read your statement and will take it into
consideration. No creditor, that we know of, considers information given
in a 100 word statement. The statement only serves to very some of the
negative listings on the credit report.
Michelle
Hiller
Seasoned Loan Expert
http://www.quoteinwriting.com
Article
Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Michelle_Hiller
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