| How to read and understand your credit report |
| By Pat Curry
Bankrate.com |
| The
lender told you to get a copy of your credit report as part of the pre-qualifying
process for a mortgage. The purpose, he said, was to see how your credit looked
and to clear up any errors that might be in the report.
But
now that you've got it, there are an awful lot of numbers, abbreviations and terms
you've never seen before. Trade lines, charge-offs, account review inquiries --
how do you read this thing? First off, there
are three major credit-reporting agencies in the United States: Experian, TransUnion
and Equifax. Order a copy of your credit report
and review it for any errors. Costs vary from state to state, but in most states,
it costs $9 to get your report. TransUnion,
Equifax and Experian all allow you to review your report online. Plus
thanks to a new
federal law you'll now be entitled to one free credit report from each of
these credit reporting agencies per year. Consumers in western states became eligible
to request their free annual credit report Dec. 1, but if you live on the East
coast you'll have to wait until Sept. 1, 2005. To find out when you become eligible
to receive a free credit report, check out Bankrate's map.
The reports will not automatically be sent out.
Each consumer must request their reports one of these three ways. Go to www.annualcreditreport.com,
which is the only authorized source for consumers to access their annual credit
report online for free. Or, call 877-322-8228. Lastly, you may complete the form
on the back of the Annual
Credit Report Request brochure, and mail it to: Annual Credit Report Request
Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, GA, 30348-5281. One more caveat: you'll be
able to order all three credit reports at one time, or at different times throughout
the year. It's your choice. But be sure to order from the centralized agency.
If you go directly to the credit reporting agencies, you will be charged unless
you fit another criteria for a free report. The
new ruling doesn't replace the other ways to receive a free credit report. You're
still entitled to a free credit report if: you've been denied a loan, insurance
or job based on your credit report; you're applying for unemployment or receive
public assistance; and you currently reside in a state that already offers an
annual free credit report from each credit reporting agency (Colorado, Maine,
Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey and Vermont. Georgia residents are entitled
to two free annual credit reports from each credit reporting agency.) "Looking
at one is a useless endeavor; you need to look at all three," says Howard
Dvorkin, president of Consolidated Credit Counseling Services in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla. "People tend to pull one and think everything is the same on all of
them. That's not normally the case." The
reports will have different information because it's a voluntary system, and creditors
subscribe to whichever agency they want -- if any at all. |