Understanding Your Credit Report

Last updated: January 14, 2025  ·  By CreditAmend.com Editorial Team

Your credit report is a detailed record of your credit history — every account you've opened, every payment you've made (or missed), every time a lender has checked your credit, and key public records like bankruptcies. This document is the raw data that credit scoring models use to calculate your credit score, and it is what lenders review when deciding whether to approve your application.

Yet most consumers have never read their full credit report, and many don't know they have three separate reports, one from each of the major credit bureaus. Understanding what's in your report — and knowing how to spot errors — is the foundation of effective credit repair and financial health.

1 in 5

consumers had errors on at least one of their three credit reports that could affect their credit score

Source: Federal Trade Commission Study, 2012

What Is a Credit Report?

A credit report is a factual record maintained by a credit reporting agency (also called a credit bureau) that details your credit history. It includes information about your credit accounts, payment history, current balances, credit limits, and public records related to your financial obligations.

Credit reports are governed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., which regulates how credit information is collected, maintained, shared, and corrected. The FCRA establishes your right to access your credit report, dispute inaccurate information, and control who can see your data.

Your credit report is not the same as your credit score. Your report is the raw data — the detailed record. Your credit score is a numerical summary calculated from that data using a mathematical model like FICO or VantageScore. Think of your credit report as the exam and your credit score as the grade.

The Three Major Credit Bureaus

In the United States, three major credit bureaus compile and maintain consumer credit reports:

The Three Major Credit Bureaus at a Glance

FeatureEquifaxExperianTransUnion
Founded 1899 1996 (as Experian; predecessor TRW since 1968) 1968
Headquarters Atlanta, Georgia Costa Mesa, California Chicago, Illinois
Consumers Tracked Over 220 million Over 220 million Over 200 million
Dispute Address P.O. Box 740256, Atlanta, GA 30374 P.O. Box 4500, Allen, TX 75013 P.O. Box 2000, Chester, PA 19016
Online Disputes equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services experian.com/disputes transunion.com/credit-disputes
Phone Disputes (866) 349-5191 (800) 493-1058 (800) 916-8800
Fraud Alert (888) 766-0008 (888) 397-3742 (800) 680-7289
Credit Lock Service Equifax Lock & Alert (free) Experian CreditLock TransUnion TrueIdentity (free)
Unique Feature Free lifetime credit lock Boost program (add utility/phone payments) Free credit monitoring with account

It is important to understand that these three bureaus are independent, competing companies. They are not government agencies. They collect data independently, and not all creditors report to all three bureaus. This means your Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion reports may contain different information, which is why you should always check all three.

How to Get Your Free Credit Reports

The FCRA (Section 612, 15 U.S.C. § 1681j) entitles every consumer to one free credit report from each of the three major bureaus every 12 months. The official — and only federally authorized — source for these free reports is AnnualCreditReport.com.

Since 2020, all three bureaus have been providing free weekly online credit reports through AnnualCreditReport.com. This expanded access, initially a temporary pandemic measure, has been extended and is currently available through at least the end of 2026.

You are also entitled to a free report in the following situations:

  • Adverse action: When you are denied credit, insurance, or employment based on your credit report (Section 615, 15 U.S.C. § 1681m) — you must request within 60 days
  • Fraud alert: When you place a fraud alert on your file
  • Inaccurate information: When information in your file is corrected after a dispute
  • Unemployed: When you are unemployed and plan to seek employment within 60 days
  • Public assistance: When you are on public welfare assistance

The Four Sections of Your Credit Report

Every credit report, regardless of which bureau issued it, is organized into four main sections. While the exact layout and terminology may vary slightly between Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, the categories of information are consistent.

Personal Information

The first section contains identifying information about you. This section is not used in calculating your credit score, but it is still important to review for accuracy. Errors here can indicate a mixed credit file (where another consumer's data has been merged with yours) or potential identity theft.

This section typically includes:

  • Your full legal name (and any variations or aliases)
  • Current and previous addresses
  • Social Security number (partially masked on the report)
  • Date of birth
  • Current and previous employers (as reported by creditors)

If you see a name variation you don't recognize, an address you've never lived at, or an employer you've never worked for, this could be a sign of a mixed file or identity theft and should be investigated immediately.

Credit Accounts (Tradelines)

The credit accounts section — often called the "tradeline" section — is the largest and most important part of your report. Each credit account you've ever had is listed here with detailed information. For each account, you'll typically see:

  • Creditor name: The lender or company that issued the account
  • Account number: Usually partially masked for security
  • Account type: Revolving (credit card), installment (loan), mortgage, etc.
  • Date opened: When the account was established
  • Credit limit or loan amount: Your maximum borrowing capacity or original loan amount
  • Current balance: How much you currently owe (as of the last reporting date)
  • Monthly payment: Your minimum or scheduled payment amount
  • Payment status: Current, 30 days late, 60 days late, 90+ days late, charged off, etc.
  • Payment history: A month-by-month record, typically covering the past 24 months
  • Responsibility: Individual, joint, authorized user, cosigner
  • Date of last activity: When the account was last updated

This section has the greatest influence on your credit score because it contains your payment history and credit utilization data — which together account for 65% of your FICO score.

Credit Inquiries

The inquiries section lists everyone who has accessed your credit report. There are two types:

  • Hard inquiries: These occur when you apply for credit and a lender checks your report as part of the lending decision. Hard inquiries can affect your score (typically 5-10 points per inquiry) and remain on your report for 2 years, though FICO only considers them for the first 12 months. Multiple hard inquiries for the same type of loan within a 14-45 day window are treated as a single inquiry for scoring purposes.
  • Soft inquiries: These occur when you check your own credit, when a lender checks your credit for a pre-approval offer, when an employer runs a background check, or when an existing creditor reviews your account. Soft inquiries have no effect on your score and may not even appear on reports pulled by lenders.

Review your hard inquiries carefully. If you see an inquiry from a company you didn't apply with, this could indicate that someone is fraudulently applying for credit in your name, or that a company pulled your report without a permissible purpose under the FCRA (Section 604, 15 U.S.C. § 1681b).

Public Records and Collections

The final section includes public record information and collection accounts.

As of 2017-2018, the three major credit bureaus implemented the National Consumer Assistance Plan (NCAP), which removed civil judgments and tax liens from credit reports. The only public record that still appears on credit reports is bankruptcy:

  • Chapter 7 bankruptcy: Remains on your report for 10 years from the filing date
  • Chapter 13 bankruptcy: Remains on your report for 7 years from the filing date

Collection accounts are also listed in this section or alongside your tradelines, depending on the bureau's format. A collection account appears when an original creditor sells or assigns your unpaid debt to a collection agency, and that agency reports the debt to the credit bureaus. Collections remain on your report for 7 years from the date of first delinquency on the original account, per FCRA Section 605 (15 U.S.C. § 1681c).

Notably, there have been significant recent changes regarding medical collections. Starting in 2022, the three major bureaus agreed to remove paid medical collection debt from credit reports and will not report medical collections until they are at least one year old. Additionally, medical collections under $500 are no longer reported by the three major bureaus as of 2023. Read more about how medical debt affects your credit.

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How to Read Your Credit Report

Reading a credit report can feel overwhelming at first, especially since each bureau formats its report differently. Follow this systematic approach to review each report thoroughly:

Common Errors to Look For

Based on consumer complaints filed with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and findings from the 2012 FTC study, the most common credit report errors fall into several categories:

  • Identity errors: Accounts belonging to someone with a similar name or SSN appearing on your report (mixed files), incorrect personal information, or accounts opened by identity thieves
  • Account status errors: A closed account reported as open, an account showing a balance after it was paid in full, a paid collection still listed as unpaid, or incorrect dates for when delinquency first occurred
  • Balance and limit errors: Incorrect current balance, wrong credit limit (which artificially inflates your utilization), duplicate reporting of the same debt by original creditor and collector, or incorrect original loan amounts
  • Payment history errors: On-time payments reported as late, incorrect severity of lateness (e.g., 90 days late instead of 30 days late), or payments reported to wrong months
  • Data management errors: Negative items remaining past the 7-year reporting limit, items that were previously removed being reinserted without proper notice (a violation of FCRA Section 611, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i(a)(5)(B)), or accounts showing after bankruptcy discharge

If you find any errors, you have the right to file a dispute with the credit bureau. Under the FCRA, the bureau must investigate within 30 days and either verify, correct, or delete the disputed information.

How Long Information Stays on Your Report

The FCRA (Section 605, 15 U.S.C. § 1681c) sets maximum time limits for how long negative information can appear on your credit report. Understanding these limits helps you know when items should naturally fall off and whether anything on your report has exceeded its legal reporting period.

Credit Report Retention Periods

Item TypeTime on ReportMeasured From
Late payments 7 years Date of the missed payment
Collection accounts 7 years Date of first delinquency on original account
Charge-offs 7 years Date of first delinquency
Chapter 7 bankruptcy 10 years Date of filing
Chapter 13 bankruptcy 7 years Date of filing
Foreclosure 7 years Date of first delinquency
Repossession 7 years Date of first delinquency
Hard inquiries 2 years Date of inquiry
Closed accounts (positive) 10 years Date account was closed
Student loan default 7 years Date of default or last payment
Short sale 7 years Date of first delinquency

If a negative item is still appearing on your report after its legal reporting period has expired, you can dispute it with the credit bureau for removal. This is one of the most straightforward types of credit repair disputes, as the law clearly defines the maximum reporting period.

Your Rights Regarding Your Credit Report

The FCRA provides you with extensive rights regarding your credit report. Knowing these rights is essential for protecting yourself and pursuing corrections:

  • Right to access (Section 609, 15 U.S.C. § 1681g): You can request disclosure of all information in your file, including the sources of that information and the names of anyone who has received your report in the past year.
  • Right to free annual reports (Section 612, 15 U.S.C. § 1681j): You're entitled to one free report from each bureau annually, plus additional free reports in specific circumstances (adverse action, fraud alert, etc.).
  • Right to dispute (Section 611, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i): You can dispute any information you believe is inaccurate or incomplete. The bureau must investigate within 30 days.
  • Right to notification (Section 611, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i): When a disputed item is corrected or deleted, the bureau must notify you in writing and provide an updated copy of your report.
  • Right to add a statement (Section 611, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i): If a dispute is not resolved in your favor, you can add a 100-word consumer statement to your file explaining your side of the dispute.
  • Right to know who accessed your report (Section 609, 15 U.S.C. § 1681g): Your report includes a list of all entities that have pulled your report, and you can see which were hard inquiries vs. soft inquiries.
  • Right to sue (Sections 616-617, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681n-1681o): If a credit bureau or furnisher violates the FCRA, you can sue for damages. Willful violations can result in $100-$1,000 per violation plus actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees.

For a comprehensive overview of all your consumer rights, see our guide to your rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

Key Takeaways

Summary: Understanding Your Credit Report

  • You have three credit reports — one from each bureau (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). They may contain different information.
  • Get free reports at AnnualCreditReport.com — the only federally authorized source. Free weekly reports are currently available.
  • Four sections to review: Personal information, credit accounts (tradelines), inquiries, and public records/collections.
  • 1 in 5 consumers have errors on their reports (FTC, 2012). Review every detail carefully.
  • Negative items have time limits: Most fall off after 7 years, Chapter 7 bankruptcy after 10 years.
  • You have the right to dispute any inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable information under the FCRA.
  • Checking your own report does not hurt your score. Make it a regular habit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I check my credit report?
You should review your full credit report from all three bureaus at least once per year. If you are actively working on credit repair, applying for a major loan, or have been a victim of identity theft, check more frequently — monthly or even weekly. Through AnnualCreditReport.com, you can currently access free weekly reports from all three bureaus. Regular monitoring helps you catch errors and signs of identity theft early.
Why are my three credit reports different?
Your reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion may differ because not all creditors report to all three bureaus. Some creditors report to only one or two bureaus, and they may report at different times during the month. Additionally, each bureau may have different data management practices, leading to variations in how information is recorded. This is why it's important to check all three reports, not just one.
Does checking my own credit report hurt my score?
No. When you check your own credit report or score, it is recorded as a 'soft inquiry' (also called a soft pull), which has zero effect on your credit score. Only 'hard inquiries' — which occur when a lender checks your credit as part of a lending decision you initiated — can affect your score. Your right to access your own credit information without penalty is protected under the FCRA (Section 612, 15 U.S.C. § 1681j).
What should I do if I find an error on my credit report?
If you find an error, you have the right to dispute it under the FCRA (Section 611, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i). You should file a dispute in writing with the credit bureau reporting the error, clearly identifying the item, explaining why it's inaccurate, and including copies of any supporting documentation. Send your dispute via certified mail with return receipt requested. The bureau must investigate within 30 days and notify you of the results. If the item cannot be verified, it must be removed.

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