Credit bureaus like Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion maintain this record. They evaluate your financial information to calculate your credit score, which is a numerical score that decides your creditworthiness.
Your credit score tells potential lenders how trustworthy you would be with a credit or a loan. Every individual has the facility to check their credit report from time to time. While some do not care about keeping an eye on their credit report, it is important that you develop the habit of monitoring your credit at least once in a year.
To ensure that these errors don't haunt you, try to review your credit report from each credit bureau at least once in a year.
Your credit score tells potential lenders how trustworthy you would be with a credit or a loan. Every individual has the facility to check their credit report from time to time. While some do not care about keeping an eye on their credit report, it is important that you develop the habit of monitoring your credit at least once in a year.
Here are a few common errors that you must look out for:
- A new address or phone number that is not yours
- Error in the spelling of your name
- Unknown accounts owned by someone with a name that’s similar to yours
- The same debt or payment failure note listed multiple times
- Incorrect dates
- Mistakenly reported delinquency or late payment
- False record of the current balance
- Incorrectly recorded credit limit
- Closed accounts that are marked as open
- Accounts appearing various times with different creditors listed
- Unauthorized accounts
- Statements in which you are an authorized user, but you are marked as the primary user
To ensure that these errors don't haunt you, try to review your credit report from each credit bureau at least once in a year.
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