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DIY Credit Disputes

Your FCRA rights explained, what you can actually dispute, the 609 letter myth debunked, and free templates that work.

18 min read Updated January 2025 Advanced

⚠️ Before You Start

Credit repair companies charge $50-150/month to do what you can do for free. Everything in this guide — disputing errors, sending letters, exercising your FCRA rights — costs you nothing.

You cannot legally remove accurate negative information just because you don't like it. Anyone promising otherwise is running a scam.

Key Takeaways

  • You can dispute inaccurate information for free under the FCRA
  • "609 letters" are a myth — they're not a magic loophole
  • Bureaus must investigate and respond within 30 days
  • Goodwill letters can sometimes remove legitimate late payments

Your Legal Rights Under the FCRA

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is your primary legal protection. Here's what it guarantees:

Right to Access

You can get your credit report for free from each bureau once per year (now weekly via AnnualCreditReport.com)

Right to Dispute

You can dispute any information you believe is inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable

Right to Investigation

Bureaus must investigate your dispute within 30 days (45 if you provide additional info)

Right to Correction or Deletion

If information can't be verified or is found inaccurate, it must be corrected or removed

What You CAN Dispute (Legitimately)

Disputes are effective when there's an actual error or inaccuracy. Common legitimate disputes:

Accounts Not Yours

Identity theft, mixed files, accounts belonging to someone with a similar name

Wrong Account Status

Showing open when closed, paid when showing balance, wrong payment status

Incorrect Balances/Limits

Wrong balance, credit limit, or high balance reported

Wrong Dates

Incorrect open date, date of last activity, or date of first delinquency (re-aging)

Duplicate Accounts

Same debt listed twice (common when sold to collectors)

Items Past 7 Years

Most negative items must be removed after 7 years (10 for bankruptcy)

What You CANNOT Dispute

No legal method can remove accurate negative information before it naturally ages off.

Accurate late payments — If you paid late, it's accurate. It stays for 7 years.

Legitimate collections — If you owed the debt and it went to collections, it's accurate.

Bankruptcy you filed — Public record. Stays 7-10 years depending on chapter.

⚠️ Warning: "Credit repair" companies that promise to remove accurate negative items are either lying or planning to commit fraud (like filing false identity theft claims). This can result in federal prosecution.

The "609 Letter" Myth — Debunked

You've probably seen ads for "609 letters" or "Section 609 dispute templates" that claim to be a secret loophole. This is a scam.

What Section 609 Actually Says

Section 609 of the FCRA (15 U.S.C. § 1681g) covers your right to request a copy of your credit file. That's it. It has nothing to do with disputing or removing items.

The False Claim

"Bureaus must provide the original signed contract for every account or delete it"

The Reality

Section 609 requires bureaus to show you what's in your file. It does NOT require them to keep original contracts or delete items they can't prove with a "wet signature."

The actual dispute process is governed by Section 611, which requires a "reasonable reinvestigation" — not production of original documents.

The Actual Dispute Process

Step 1: Get Your Reports

Get your free reports from AnnualCreditReport.com — now available weekly for free. Review all three bureaus; they may have different information.

Step 2: Identify Errors

Go through each account and look for:

  • Accounts you don't recognize
  • Wrong balances, limits, or dates
  • Incorrect payment history
  • Duplicate entries
  • Items older than 7 years

Step 3: File Your Dispute

You can dispute online (fastest) or by mail (creates paper trail):

Mail Addresses (Send Certified)

  • Experian: P.O. Box 4500, Allen, TX 75013
  • Equifax: P.O. Box 740256, Atlanta, GA 30374-0256
  • TransUnion: P.O. Box 2000, Chester, PA 19016

Step 4: Wait for Response

Bureaus must respond within 30 days (45 if you send additional documentation during the investigation). They'll either:

  • Correct or delete the item
  • Verify the information is accurate
  • Determine your dispute is frivolous

Goodwill Letters: Removing Legitimate Late Payments

A goodwill letter asks a creditor to remove a legitimate late payment as a courtesy. This isn't a dispute — you're not claiming the information is wrong. You're asking for mercy.

When Goodwill Letters Work

  • ✓ You have a long, positive history with the creditor
  • ✓ The late payment was a one-time mistake
  • ✓ You have a legitimate explanation (medical emergency, job loss)
  • ✓ The account is now current or paid off

Success Rates

Goodwill adjustments are entirely at the creditor's discretion. Success rates vary widely:

  • Credit unions — Generally more flexible
  • Synchrony — Some reported successes
  • Chase, Bank of America — Rarely agree (policy against it)

💡 Tip: Use our free dispute letter generator to create goodwill letters customized to your situation.

Pay-for-Delete: The Grey Area

Pay-for-delete is when you negotiate with a collector to pay a debt in exchange for them deleting it from your credit report entirely.

Is It Legal?

For consumers: Yes, you can ask.
For collectors: It technically violates their agreements with credit bureaus, but some do it anyway.

Who Might Agree?

  • Third-party debt buyers (they bought debt for pennies and just want cash)
  • Small collection agencies
  • Original creditors (almost never)
  • Large national agencies (too much compliance risk)

⚠️ Critical: Get ANY pay-for-delete agreement in writing before sending payment. Verbal promises are worthless.

If Your Dispute is Denied

If the bureau "verifies" the information as accurate, you have options:

1. Request Method of Verification

Ask the bureau how they verified the information. They must tell you.

2. Dispute Directly with the Furnisher

Send a dispute to the company that reported the information (the creditor or collector).

3. Add a Consumer Statement

You can add a 100-word statement to your file explaining the dispute.

4. File a CFPB Complaint

File at consumerfinance.gov — companies respond to 99.6% of complaints.