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Challenging Your
Credit Report
Challenging Your Credit Report
Explained
You work directly with your
creditors to clear up credit issues. When you have a correction, get a letter
from the creditor that you can then submit to all three credit bureaus to update
your credit score.
Important items to note about
your credit report include:
-
Late payments are generally
categorized as 30, 60, or 90 days late
-
The more late payments there are,
the lower your credit score and the less favorable your credit looks
-
If you have previous mortgages on
your credit, lenders carefully scrutinize this to see if you were timely on
these
-
Some lenders restrict certain
mortgage loan programs to people with “no lates” within the last 12 months
on a mortgage
-
Other lenders specialize in people
who have 30, 60, or more days late on their mortgage, but obviously their
rates tend to be higher
-
Sometimes lenders can be irritated
by lots of small $20 or $80 collections from old cell phone bills and
similar items – this shows that you are not a conscientious customer
-
If there is an occasional thirty
day late on a credit card that has normally been paid like clockwork for
several years, this may be explained in writing to the lender as an accident
that won’t happen again
-
Sometimes your lender will double
check your credit just prior to sending the loan out. If you happen to be
late on something, such as a car payment or mortgage, this might stop the
loan in its tracks.
-
When you are in the process of
getting a mortgage it is a good idea not to run up additional credit until
after you are done
Credit Problems
-
If you have these, it is best to get a copy of your
credit report before you try to apply for a mortgage
-
There may be items that are inaccurately on there, old
collections that were paid and should be removed, etc.
-
Sometimes there will be creditors listed on your credit
report that have reported collections for you whose name you don’t recognize
- this is usually because these are the names of the collection agencies
that your “bad debt” was sold to
-
You can provide documentation to credit bureaus to have
inaccuracies removed from your credit report
-
Credit bureaus have detailed websites that can tell you
exactly what you need to do to try to resolve issues
An important point to understand is that
lenders are willing to look at people of many different credit types. There are
numerous lenders that focus on people with challenging credit issues. Keep in
mind that in exchange for giving “risky” mortgages to people with credit issues,
they are likely to charge higher interest rates. |