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Financial Empowerment

How to Read Your Credit Report for Free

📅 April 27, 2025 🕐 5 min read ✍ Dream Home Fund
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Your credit report is the foundation of your financial identity in the eyes of lenders. Yet most people have never read one. Here is a straightforward guide to getting your report, understanding what it says, and fixing what needs fixing.

What Is a Credit Report?

A credit report is a detailed record of your credit history. It is compiled by the three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, and contains information reported by your creditors about your accounts, payment history, balances, and any negative events like collections or bankruptcies.

Your credit score is derived from your credit report. The report is the raw data; the score is the summary number.

How to Get Your Free Credit Report

By federal law, you are entitled to one free credit report per year from each of the three bureaus. The official source is AnnualCreditReport.com. Be cautious of other sites that advertise "free" reports, they often require a paid subscription to access.

Pull all three reports at once. The bureaus collect data independently, and your report at one bureau may differ from another. Errors or missing accounts may appear at one bureau but not the others.

What to Look For

When reviewing your credit report, check for:

Errors on credit reports are more common than most people expect. One study found that one in five consumers had an error significant enough to affect their score. Always check before applying for a mortgage.

How to Dispute Errors

If you find an error, you have the right to dispute it with the bureau that is reporting the incorrect information. You can file disputes online at each bureau's website, by mail, or by phone. The bureau is required to investigate and respond within 30 days. If the creditor cannot verify the information, the bureau must remove it.

Keep records of all disputes, screenshots, confirmation emails, and copies of any documentation you submit.

What You Cannot Remove

Accurate negative information, late payments, collections, bankruptcies, cannot be removed before their legal removal date, regardless of what credit repair companies may claim. Late payments stay for seven years. Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays for ten years. Anyone who promises to remove accurate negative items is misleading you.

How Often Should You Check?

At minimum, pull your full reports once a year. If you are actively preparing to buy a home, pull them six to twelve months before you plan to apply. That gives you time to dispute errors and see the corrections before your lender runs their credit check.

Ready to take the next step?

Dream Home Fund provides down payment assistance to help families like yours achieve homeownership. Get in touch today.

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