How to Remove Collections from Your Credit Report
Collection activity on your credit report is damaging to your credit score. That’s why getting it removed can help you accomplish financial goals and qualify for loans and credit products. Depending on the specifics of your debt, there are a few potential paths you can take to try to get incidents off your report.
Here’s what you need to know about removing collections from your credit report.
Table of contents
- Check your credit report thoroughly
- If you find an error in your report, dispute the collection
- If you don’t find any errors, ask the agency to validate the debt
- If the collection hasn’t been paid, continue paying on time
- If the collection has been paid, send a goodwill letter to the agency
- If that fails, wait for the collection to drop off your repo#rt
- As an alternative, hire a credit repair company
How to get collections off your credit report
This guide will walk you through the steps of removing collection accounts from your credit report.
Check your credit report thoroughly
If you start getting calls or notices about bills that are past due and missed payments, it might mean these delinquent accounts and unpaid charge-offs have been reported to the major credit bureaus and now appear on your credit report. In this case, the very first thing you need to do is check your credit report thoroughly. Fortunately, it’s now very easy to get access to your free credit report online.
You can check your credit report, at annualcreditreport.com. At least until the end of 2023, you can pull reports from each of the three big credit bureaus once per week at no cost.
Knowing how to read your credit report is a helpful skill you can learn in no time. When you review your report, you can jump to the “credit history and accounts” and check for any accounts that might be showing as “negative” instead of “good standing.” That’s where you’ll find information on missed or late payments.
In some cases, these accounts may have been sent to collections. You can always call the creditor listed to find out if you can pay them directly or if you have to deal with a collections agency they may have turned the account over to.
The next place to examine is the “public records,” which may have another name like “potentially negative items.” This section may contain items that can lower your credit score like bankruptcies, foreclosures, charge-offs, delinquent payments or repossessions.
It’s important to go through this information for accuracy. If you find anything reported incorrectly, you can take steps to update or remove the information.
How to identify collection account errors in your credit report
If you see any information in these sections of your report that is not accurate, you have a legal right to dispute them. Errors you might find include:
- Someone else’s information appearing on your credit report by mistake
- The debt is over seven years old
- Incorrect data points on amounts and other activities like delinquency, date opened, balance, etc.
- Negative items that should have been removed by law, like paid off medical bills
If you find an error in the report, dispute the collection
Errors on your credit report can be removed or corrected. In most cases, you have to initiate this process. For incorrect information, you can file a dispute with the credit bureaus to have the accounts investigated. Your dispute letter should include:
- Your contact information: Complete name, address, and telephone number
- A clear list of each mistake with account numbers
- An explanation as to why and how the information is incorrect
- An explicit request for the information to be removed or corrected
- A copy of your credit report with the erroneous items highlighted
- Supporting documentation proving how the information should be reported
There are many ways you can contact and dispute items on your credit report. The Consumer Protection Bureau’s guide on disputing credit report errors contains the following directory of each of the credit reporting agency (CRAs) and where to send disputes:
Online: www.equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services/credit-dispute/
By mail: Download the dispute form
Mail the dispute form with your letter to:
Equifax Information Services LLC
P.O. Box 740256
Atlanta, GA 30348
By phone: Phone number provided on credit report or (866) 349-5191
Online: www.experian.com/disputes/main.html
By mail: Use the address provided on your credit report or mail your letter to:
Experian
P.O. Box 4500
Allen, TX 75013
By phone: Phone number provided on credit report or (888) 397-3742
Online: https://dispute.transunion.com
By mail: Download the dispute form
Mail the dispute form with your letter to:
TransUnion LLC
Consumer Dispute Center
P.O. Box 2000
Chester, PA 19016
By phone: (800) 916-8800
According to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), credit reporting agencies and creditors must investigate and respond to disputes within 30, and sometimes up to 45, days of receiving your credit report dispute. If the information is found to be correct, then it will remain on your report. Otherwise, it will be removed or updated.
If you don’t find any errors, ask the agency to validate the debt
In many circumstances, debts can get shuffled around from one third-party debt collector to another, sometimes several times over. It’s not uncommon for inaccuracies to get transmitted to the debt collection agency. Also, documents verifying the original debt can get lost, too.
Once a debt ends up in collections, and you start to get communications about owing the debt, it’s totally acceptable to ask the debt collector to verify that the debt is valid and actually belongs to you.
Here’s the information you should include in your request to validate the debt:
- Information about the original creditor and the original account
- Amount and age of the debt
- Supporting documentation like an original invoice, bill, promissory note or similar document to prove the debt’s validity
- Why the agency believes you owe the debt
- Whether or not they are licensed to collect debt in your state
Note, once you send the debt collector a written dispute or a written request to validate the debt within 30 days, they have to pause collecting the debt until they respond to your dispute or answer your request.
If the personal information attached to the debt, like your name, aliases, phone number, address, etc., cannot be accurately matched with the debt, it must be removed from your credit report. Also, if they cannot provide any proof the debt is valid, it must also be removed from your credit report.
Another tactic along these lines is to ask credit reporting agencies to correct any inaccurate information. So if you find any mistake in relation to the collection account regarding any data point, you can ask the CRA to update it. Like asking for validation, if the item is not updated in a timely manner, it must be removed.
If the collection hasn’t been paid, continue paying on time
Assuming the steps above don’t work, then you want to take measures to prevent further damage to your credit score. You will need to continue paying the debt until the creditor responds to your validation request or until you’ve paid the entire balance off.
Chances are, you don’t have much room in your budget to make extra payments on a debt you didn’t expect to go to collections in the first place. In this case, try to make a payment arrangement with the creditor. Pay as much as you can with the frequency that works for your budget.
To make sure the collector doesn’t violate any part of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) ask them to put the payment agreement in writing. Then, be sure to pay according to the agreement.
Also, avoid giving any debt collector direct access to your debit or credit card or even your bank account, as they could withdraw more money than you agree to. Make your payment by check or money order. In some cases, you may be able to pay online.
If the collection has been paid, send a goodwill letter to the agency
Even if the collection has been paid, the unpaid collection and the record of collection activity can stay on your credit report and have a negative impact for up to seven years. Some lenders will consider this derogatory information based on the credit scoring models they use or in their underwriting process, which could negatively affect your borrowing applications.
Even with a valid, paid collection account, there’s still a chance you can get it removed, and some FICO score and Vantage score models will ignore a collection that’s marked as paid. You can write a letter asking the creditor or collector to remove this information as a goodwill deletion. Your goodwill letter doesn’t need to have a lot of information or details. Simply identify the debt, and point out that it has been paid and that you’d like them to remove it.
The debt collector is not obligated to remove factual, verified information from your credit report, although some will as a courtesy. If this method works, be sure to get written communication from the agency saying they have notified credit bureaus to remove any reference to the delinquent account from your history. This way, you can present this to the credit bureaus in case the agency doesn’t push the update to all CRAs.
If that fails, wait for the collection to drop off your report
Generally speaking, negative information is removed from your credit report after seven years. The clock starts from the first date your delinquent accounts are reported. This means if you miss one or more payments, then the account is sent to collection, the “late payment” information will be removed seven years after the first date of delinquency, not when it gets to collections.
Be aware, however, that just because a debt disappears from your credit report doesn’t mean you don’t have to pay it. If it’s not past the statute of limitations or the time frame when a creditor can sue you for a debt, then a creditor still has the right to pursue payment and even take you to court to recoup it.
Each state has its own laws that govern the statute of limitation on debt. Make sure you understand your responsibility to pay old debts based on your state’s laws. If necessary, seek counsel from a lawyer to make sure you are compliant with your debt obligations and will not end up paying more than required.
Should you negotiate a pay-for-delete agreement?
In some cases, you can negotiate what is called a pay-for-delete arrangement. With pay-for-delete, you pay all or a portion of the debt in exchange for the collection agency removing the account from your credit report.
This arrangement can be successful, but you should proceed with caution. Capture the agreement in writing (which some collections agencies are hesitant to do) and also make sure they will remove both the late payment information and the collection account. Pay-for-delete can work sometimes, but the practice is not as common because creditors are technically supposed to report accurate information to CRAs.
As an alternative, hire a credit repair company
Credit repair companies may help you remove negative information from your credit report, but it can be a costly service. Although you can pretty much do the same thing they can, hiring a service can save you time and potentially get better results. Plus, the credit repair company may have insight into additional personal finance tips and strategies to help boost your credit score even further.
If you go this route, make sure that you’re dealing with a reputable company that uses effective, nonfraudulent ways to remove items from your credit report. Check sites like the Better Business Bureau, Trustpilot, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) or Google Reviews to make sure the services don’t engage in unethical, shady practices around credit repair.
Latest news on collections activity
The three major credit bureaus have extended a pandemic policy until the end of 2023 that lets Americans get free credit reports on a weekly basis. Previously, Americans were limited to one free credit report per agency, per year.
While the number of collection incidents on Americans’ credit reports has declined in recent years, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently reported that Americans still had 175 million collection incidents on their reports as of 2022.
Summary of Money’s guide for removing collections from your credit report
You can remove a collection account from your credit report with a few different methods. Though removing a collection account from your credit can be helpful, there’s no guarantee that your efforts will work or have the results you are expecting. If you decide you want to try to remove a collection from your credit report, here’s a quick recap on the process:
- Check your credit report thoroughly
- If you find an error, dispute it
- If you don’t find any errors, ask the debt collector to verify it
- If the collection hasn’t been paid, continue paying on time
- If the collection has been paid, send a goodwill letter to the debt collection agency
- If that fails, wait for the collection to drop off your credit report
- Hire a credit repair company as needed
More on Credit & Credit Repair
Money’s Top Selection Guides for Improving Your Credit
Money’s Credit Repair Companies Reviews |