Fast Credit Report Repair
How To Repair Your Credit Report
Credit Repair or Credit Report Repair can be achieved by deleting inaccurate negative items from your credit bureau reports. Negative items include: charge offs, bankruptcy, judgments, repossessions, collection accounts, late payments, credit inquiries, and other derogatory items.
I Repaired my Credit and My Score Jumped 145 Points!
I tried fixing my own credit but ran into one "brick wall" after another. I was really sick of having bad credit and all of its humiliating consequences so I hired a credit repair expert. I am so glad that I did as they totally rehabilitated my credit history!
Click Here To View A Chart Showing My Credit Score Improvements

My Credit Score Has Increased 145 Points in Just 6 Months!
Click Here To View 2 Of My Credit Repair Deletion Letters
Here Is One Letter That Shows 1 Chargeoff, 1 Collection, and 1 Judgment Deleted From My Credit Report:
Here Is Another Letter That Shows A Bananna Republic Credit Card Chargeoff Deleted, An Automobile Repossession Deleted, and a Fleet MasterCard Chargeoff Deleted:
Increase Your Credit Scores, Improve Your Lifestyle!
Once my credit history was cleaned up my credit score improved and now I am in the top 10% of Americans. In total, it was a 145 point Credit Score Improvement as a result of the work Total-Credit-Repair.com did for me!
I recommend Total-Credit-Repair.com to anyone who wants to repair their credit report and improve their credit rating. They have deleted all types of negative credit including bankruptcy, foreclosure, judgments, collections, charge offs, and more.
Can I Repair My Own Credit Report?
Disputing the credit report is easy. Getting results from the credit bureaus is amazingly difficult, complex, and infuriating. It is not a coincidence that the Federal Trade Commission receives more complaints against credit bureaus than any other type of business. Remember, the credit bureaus are primarily interested in protecting their profits. Investigating your challenge consumes these profits. Short of sparking a mass number of lawsuits, the credit bureaus seem to do everything in their power to discourage consumers from making progress in their restoration efforts.
Repairing your own credit is like repairing your own transmission or representing yourself in court; it is possible, but you must decide if you are willing to take the time and assume the risks of doing it yourself.
This All Sounds Good, But Is It Legal?
Although the credit bureaus would like to have you think otherwise, there is absolutely nothing illegal about disputing items on your credit report. In fact, it is your explicit right by law to do so. (See Fair Credit Reporting Act) Credit report repair is as legal as pleading "not guilty" in a court of law.
Do I Need To Pay My Bills?
If there are delinquent accounts appearing on your credit reports that have not been paid off, the actual debt behind the listing remains the same even if we delete the account from your credit report. You still owe the same money that you owed in the first place. If you don’t pay the debt, the creditor or collection agency could always re-report the item. So removing the listing without addressing the debt is only a temporary solution.
What Is The Fair Credit Reporting Act?
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) allows a consumer to challenge the information on his credit report on the basis of “completeness and accuracy.� If, after a reinvestigation by the credit bureau, the disputed information “is found to be inaccurate or can no longer be verified, the [credit bureau] shall promptly delete such information.
The credit bureaus are required to complete the investigation within a “reasonable period of time.; This period has been set at thirty days.
The credit bureaus can ignore the consumer dispute if they have reason to believe that the dispute is “frivolous or irrelevant.� The FTC commentary on the FCRA cites, as an example of a frivolous dispute, a dispute wherein the consumer challenges all negative items on his credit report without providing any allegations regarding specific items in the credit file. However, “A [credit bureau] must assume a consumer's dispute is bona fide, unless there is clear and convincing evidence to the contrary.
When a consumer challenges a negative credit listing on the basis of extenuating circumstances, such as health problems, divorce, job loss, etc., the credit bureaus are entitled to ignore that dispute.
When a consumer submits a dispute which is neither frivolous nor irrelevant by credit bureau standards, the credit bureau must “at a minimum... check with the original sources or other reliable sources of the disputed information and inform them of the nature of the consumer's dispute. In some cases of consumer dispute, “Reinvestigation and verification may require more than asking the original source of the disputed information the same question and receiving the same answer.
In other words, when a consumer files or re-files a valid dispute, the credit bureaus must contact the source of the credit information (the creditor) and confirm that the information is accurate, verifiable, and not obsolete. In some circumstances, the credit bureau is required to go beyond a simple verification of the creditor's own computer record. If, within 30 days, the credit bureau has not received verification from the creditor, then the credit bureau must promptly delete the credit listing.
In theory and law, the process is deceptively simple, thus leading many people to think that they can easily handle this themselves “for the price of a few postage stamps. Most quickly discover that the credit bureaus have made it much more difficult than one would imagine.