How to Remove Collections From Your Credit Report
October 17, 2023 | 5 min read
October 17, 2023 | 5 min read
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A collection account on a credit report often comes as a surprise. The first sign may not be a phone call or letter, but a sudden drop in credit score followed by a new entry from a company the consumer does not recognize. Federal law gives every consumer the right to verify, dispute, and challenge inaccurate collection entries. Credit Saint works through that process on behalf of clients, reviewing reports across all three bureaus and pursuing formal disputes where they apply.
When an original creditor decides a debt is unlikely to be collected, the account may be sold or assigned to a third-party debt collector. That collector then reports the account to one or more of the three major credit bureaus. The entry typically shows the collection agency name, the original creditor, the date of original delinquency, and the amount owed.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) sets standards for how this information is reported and gives consumers the right to dispute entries that appear inaccurate. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) governs how collectors may communicate and what they can and cannot say about a debt.
Before paying, settling, or disputing, pull all three credit reports through AnnualCreditReport.com. Review every line of the collection entry against your own records. Several questions are worth answering:
For a deeper look at how collection entries are reviewed, see the Credit Saint guide on collection agencies and your credit report.
Under the FDCPA and Regulation F, a debt collector must provide validation information about the debt when requested. This includes the name of the original creditor, the amount owed, and documentation tying the debt to the consumer. If the collector cannot produce that documentation, that is a significant signal worth flagging during a dispute.
One important caution: making a payment on an old debt can, in some states, reset the statute of limitations. Be careful before paying or acknowledging an old debt that is unfamiliar.
If a collection entry appears inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable, the FCRA gives consumers the right to dispute it directly with the credit bureaus. The bureau must investigate within 30 days and either verify the information with the data furnisher or remove or correct the entry. Disputes can also be filed directly with the data furnisher.
Effective disputes are specific. Vague claims like “this is wrong” tend to result in the entry being verified as-is. Specific claims, supported by documentation, like “the date of first delinquency is reported as March 2023, but the actual date of last payment was January 2022,” carry more weight.
Credit Saint’s team handles every step of the dispute process on your behalf. We pull your reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, identify collection entries and other items that may be eligible for dispute, and challenge them with the credit bureaus and data furnishers. We handle every step from research through follow-up, while you review the findings and authorize the action.
Credit Saint has been in business for more than 19 years, holds an A rating with the Better Business Bureau since initial accreditation in 2007, and offers a 90-day money-back guarantee.
For collection accounts tied to broader debt issues, professional debt resolution may also help. Some consumers explore debt settlement options when the underlying balances are too large to manage through credit work alone.
If a collection is fully accurate, paying it does not automatically remove it from the report. The status changes from “unpaid” to “paid,” which newer scoring models like FICO 9 and VantageScore 4.0 may treat more favorably, though older models still in widespread use may continue to weigh it negatively.
Some consumers negotiate a pay-for-delete arrangement, where the collector agrees to remove the entry in exchange for payment. This is not guaranteed and is not always offered. Any pay-for-delete agreement should be obtained in writing before payment.
Reviewed By:
Ashley Davison
Editor
Ashley is currently the Chief Compliance Officer for Credit Saint, previously the Chief Operating Officer. Ashley got into the Financial world by working as a Logistics Coordinator at Ernst & Young. Coming from a previous career in education, she is eager to teach the world everything she knows and learn everything that she doesn’t! Ashley is a FICO® certified professional, a Board Certified Credit Consultant, a Certified Credit Score Consultant with the Credit Consultants Association of America, UDAAP certified, and holds a Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Compliance Certificate.