How to Dispute Inaccurate Items on Your Credit Report: Step-by-Step Guide
According to the Federal Trade Commission's most cited study on credit report accuracy, roughly 1 in 5 consumers has a verifiable error on at least one of their three credit reports, and 1 in 20 has an error serious enough to push them into a worse credit tier. After processing more than 50,000 disputes on behalf of our clients, we can tell you those numbers are if anything conservative. Wrong balances, accounts that don't belong to you, collections that were already paid, late payments that weren't actually late — they are everywhere.
The good news: federal law gives you a powerful, structured process to force the credit bureaus to investigate and correct these errors. The bad news: the bureaus have spent decades perfecting techniques to "verify" inaccurate information in under 30 seconds without ever looking at a single document. This guide walks you through the dispute process the way it actually works — not the sanitized version on the bureau websites — including the exact mailing addresses, the precise language to use, the evidence to attach, and how to escalate when the bureaus stonewall you.
Your Right to Dispute: FCRA §611 in Plain English
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. §1681i, commonly cited as FCRA §611) is the federal statute that gives you the right to dispute anything you believe is inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable on your credit report. The law requires the credit reporting agency (CRA) to do four specific things when you file a dispute:
- Conduct a "reasonable investigation" within 30 days (extended to 45 days if you provide additional documents during the investigation window).
- Forward all relevant information you submitted to the furnisher (the bank, collector, or creditor that reported the item).
- Delete, modify, or update any information that cannot be verified or is found to be inaccurate.
- Send you written notice of the results, including a free updated copy of your credit report if anything changed.
Note the phrase "reasonable investigation." Courts have repeatedly held — including in Johnson v. MBNA America Bank (4th Cir. 2004) — that a reasonable investigation requires more than a clerical match. The bureau must actually evaluate the dispute. In practice, the big three usually don't, which is exactly why understanding the rules matters.
The Four Places You Can Dispute (and Which to Use)
Most consumers think "disputing" means clicking a button on Experian.com. That's the worst possible move. Online disputes lock you into a stripped-down process called e-OSCAR, where your entire complaint gets reduced to a two- or three-digit code before it ever reaches the furnisher. There are actually four channels available to you:
| Channel | How It Works | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Online portal | Form on the bureau's website. Reduced to e-OSCAR codes. | Almost never. Last resort. |
| Certified mail to bureau | Written letter, full documents preserved, mail receipt as proof. | Default for most disputes. |
| Direct dispute to furnisher | Letter to the creditor or collector under FCRA §623(b). | When the furnisher is the source of the error. |
| CFPB complaint | Federal complaint that goes to the bureau and triggers a regulator-tracked response. | When the bureau stalls, parrots, or refuses to investigate. |
For most inaccuracies, the right starting point is certified mail to the bureau and a parallel letter to the furnisher. That gives you two independent investigations under two different sections of the FCRA — and two records you can point to if a violation occurs.
Pro Tip
Never dispute online if you intend to preserve your right to sue. Many bureau online portals include terms of use that try to limit your remedies. Paper, with a certified mail receipt, is the gold standard.
The Three Bureau Mailing Addresses
These are the addresses the bureaus publish for written disputes. Send each dispute to all three bureaus that are reporting the item — never assume an account is on only one report.
| Bureau | Mailing Address |
|---|---|
| Equifax | P.O. Box 740256 Atlanta, GA 30374 |
| Experian | P.O. Box 4500 Allen, TX 75013 |
| TransUnion | Consumer Solutions P.O. Box 2000 Chester, PA 19016 |
Always send disputes USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt Requested (Form 3811, the green card). The cost is roughly $8.50 per letter and gives you a federal receipt proving the date and location of delivery. Without that proof, the 30-day clock under FCRA §611 is effectively unenforceable.
What to Include in a Bulletproof Dispute Letter
The bureaus are legally allowed to reject a dispute as "frivolous or irrelevant" under FCRA §611(a)(3) if it lacks the information needed to investigate. They abuse this provision constantly. The way to defeat it is to give them every piece of identifying information up front so they have no excuse to bounce the letter back.
Every dispute letter should contain:
- Your full legal name (exactly as it appears on the report)
- Your date of birth
- The last four digits of your Social Security number (never the full number)
- Your current address and any addresses listed on the report from the past two years
- A clear identification of the disputed item — creditor name, account number (partial is fine), and reported balance or date
- The specific reason for the dispute — "not mine," "balance is wrong," "never late," "already paid," "past statute of limitations," etc.
- Supporting documents — payment records, billing statements, ID, police report (for identity theft), or court records
- An explicit demand for investigation under FCRA §611 and deletion if the item cannot be verified
Sample Dispute Letter
Jane Q. Consumer
123 Main Street
Anytown, FL 33101
DOB: 04/12/1985 | SSN: xxx-xx-1234
May 30, 2026
Experian
P.O. Box 4500
Allen, TX 75013
RE: Formal Dispute Under FCRA §611
To Whom It May Concern:
I am writing to dispute the following item on my Experian credit report (report number 1234567890, pulled 05/15/2026):
Creditor: Midland Credit Management
Account #: ending in 4421
Reported balance: $1,847
Status: Collection
This account does not belong to me. I have never had a credit relationship with Midland Credit Management or the original creditor listed on this entry. I have attached a copy of my driver's license, a utility bill confirming my current address, and an FTC Identity Theft Report (number IT-2026-008812).
Under FCRA §611, please conduct a reasonable investigation into this item. If the furnisher cannot provide documentation verifying the account is mine — including a signed contract or application — please delete this item from my file and send me an updated report at no charge.
Sincerely,
Jane Q. Consumer
Keep it tight. Bureaus that receive five-page screeds with legalese tend to flag them as "credit repair organization" letters and reject them as frivolous. A clear, one-page letter with attachments gets processed.
What Happens After You Mail the Dispute
Once your letter is delivered (your green card will come back in 5–10 days), the 30-day investigation clock starts. The bureau is required to:
- Forward your dispute and any supporting documentation to the furnisher within 5 business days.
- Receive a response from the furnisher confirming, modifying, or deleting the information.
- Update your file accordingly and send you written results.
If you send additional documents during the 30-day window — say, a new piece of evidence you found a week after mailing — the investigation period automatically extends to 45 days under FCRA §611(a)(1)(B). This is sometimes useful, sometimes a trap. Strategically, you generally want the shortest possible window so the furnisher has less time to dig up records.
Common Bureau Tactics and How to Beat Them
Once you've sent a clean dispute, here's the playbook the bureaus will run against you. After 50,000 disputes, we see the same four moves over and over.
Tactic 1: "Verified" Without Proof
The most common bureau response is a one-line letter saying the item has been "verified as accurate." No documentation, no explanation, no signature from the furnisher. Under FCRA §611(a)(6)(B)(iii), you are entitled to a description of the investigation procedure. Demand it in a follow-up letter. Nine times out of ten, no actual procedure existed.
Tactic 2: The "Frivolous" Rejection
The bureau returns your dispute unprocessed, claiming it lacks "sufficient information" or is duplicative. Defeat this by always including the eight elements listed above and clearly identifying the specific item, even if the issue is the same as a previous dispute. Then send a new dispute with a slightly different angle (e.g., shift from "not mine" to "balance is inaccurate").
Tactic 3: Parroting the Furnisher
The bureau accepts the furnisher's response verbatim without conducting any independent review. This is a textbook FCRA §611 violation under Hinkle v. Midland Credit Management (11th Cir. 2016). Your follow-up letter should specifically demand "the documents and identity of the person who verified the information" — language drawn straight from §611(a)(7).
Tactic 4: Re-aging or Modifying Instead of Deleting
You dispute a collection and the bureau "updates" it — changing the date of last activity, modifying the balance, or refreshing the date reported. This can actually extend the seven-year reporting window in violation of FCRA §605(c). Pull your report 30 days later and compare it field-by-field to the version you disputed against. If anything got worse, that's a separate violation worth documenting.
Watch Out
If a "deleted" item reappears on your report later, that's a re-insertion. Under FCRA §611(a)(5)(B), the bureau is required to notify you in writing within 5 business days of any re-insertion. If they don't, that's a willful violation worth statutory damages of $100–$1,000 per occurrence.
Metro 2 Reporting Violations: The Hidden Lever
Every furnisher that reports to the bureaus is required to follow the Metro 2 format, a standardized reporting protocol maintained by the Consumer Data Industry Association. When a furnisher violates Metro 2 specifications, the reported data is, by definition, inaccurate — and an inaccuracy is grounds for deletion under FCRA §611.
Common Metro 2 violations to look for on your report:
- Date of Last Activity (DLA) doesn't match Date of First Delinquency (DOFD). These fields have specific definitions and bureaus routinely confuse them.
- Status code conflicts with payment history. A collection can't show "current" if the prior month showed a charge-off.
- Balance amount doesn't reconcile with the high-credit field.
- Account type code is wrong (e.g., reporting an installment loan as revolving credit).
- Multiple collections reporting on the same original debt (the original creditor and one or more collectors all showing balances).
When you spot one, name the specific Metro 2 field in your dispute. Generic disputes get coded out; specific ones force human review. This is one of the highest-leverage moves in the entire process, and it's a major reason our deletion rates outperform DIY attempts. For more on identifying these errors, see our guide on how to read a credit report.
The Furnisher Dispute: Hitting Both Sides
FCRA §623(b) gives you a separate right to dispute directly with the furnisher — the bank or collector itself. The furnisher then has its own 30-day investigation window, and a failed investigation is independently actionable. Always send a parallel furnisher dispute, addressed to the company's official designated dispute address (look it up on the back of any statement or on the company's website under "Consumer Rights").
This matters because a furnisher that "verifies" to the bureau but cannot independently substantiate the account when contacted directly has just created a documented inconsistency. That inconsistency is your leverage on the next round of disputes. For a deeper dive into furnisher rights, read our breakdown of your FCRA and FDCPA consumer rights.
Escalating: When and How to File a CFPB Complaint
If a bureau ignores you, "verifies" without proof for the second or third time, or fails to respond within 30 days, your next move is a complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. CFPB complaints are routed directly to the company's executive complaint team, not the boilerplate dispute desk. Average response time we see: 9 days, versus 30+ for a mailed dispute.
Your CFPB complaint should include:
- A factual summary (2–4 sentences) of the inaccurate item.
- The date(s) you previously disputed and the bureau's response.
- Copies of your dispute letter, the bureau's reply, and your certified mail receipts.
- The specific FCRA section(s) you allege were violated.
- A clear remedy — usually "deletion of the inaccurate tradeline."
The CFPB does not adjudicate disputes, but the complaint becomes part of a public database the bureaus monitor closely. The rate of resolution after a CFPB complaint, in our internal data, is roughly 3x the rate of a comparable mailed dispute.
How Long Items Stay (and Why Dispute Timing Matters)
Most negative items have a seven-year reporting limit under FCRA §605, measured from the original delinquency date. Disputing as the seven-year mark approaches is high-leverage: furnishers tend to be far less willing to dig through old records to verify a debt that's about to fall off anyway. We cover this dynamic in detail in our article on how long late payments stay on your credit report.
For collections specifically, the FICO 9 and VantageScore 4 models ignore paid collections entirely — but most lenders still use FICO 8, where paid collections continue to hurt. That's why dispute-based deletion remains the gold standard, and why our guide to removing collections from your credit report walks through the specific tactics for that account type.
When DIY Disputes Make Sense — and When They Don't
If you have one or two clear errors and good documentation, the DIY process described above can absolutely work. We encourage it. What it can't do is sustain a 6- or 12-month campaign of escalating disputes, follow-ups, furnisher letters, CFPB complaints, and Metro 2 challenges across multiple accounts. That's where the time-and-pressure math breaks down for most consumers.
At Credit Success Network, we've built our process around the gaps in the bureaus' "reasonable investigation" routine. Our average client sees the first deletions within 35 days, and we've recovered over $6.7M in funding for clients who could finally qualify after years of being locked out. If you want to understand the difference between basic credit repair and a full restoration process, read our piece on credit repair versus credit restoration, or start from our main home page to see how the program works.
Quick Reference: The Dispute Workflow
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| 0 | Pull all three reports from annualcreditreport.com. Identify every inaccuracy. |
| 1 | Mail certified dispute letters to all three bureaus + direct disputes to furnishers. |
| 5–10 | Green cards (return receipts) come back. File them. |
| 30–45 | Bureau responses arrive. Pull fresh reports to compare. |
| 45 | For any "verified" items: send follow-up demanding investigation procedure. |
| 60 | For items still not deleted: file CFPB complaint with full evidence. |
| 75–90 | Reassess. Pivot to new dispute angle (Metro 2, balance, status code). |
This is a campaign, not a single letter. The bureaus are betting you'll give up after the first "verified" response. Don't.
Bottom Line
FCRA §611 is one of the most powerful consumer protection statutes ever written, and the dispute process gives you real, enforceable leverage against the credit bureaus. But it only works if you use it correctly: certified mail, complete identifying information, specific dispute grounds, supporting documentation, and a willingness to escalate when the first response is the inevitable rubber-stamp "verified." Done right, disputing inaccuracies is the single fastest legitimate way to move your credit score. Done wrong, it's a paper trail of frustration.
If you want a head start on understanding the bureau-specific dispute strategies, our complete guide to the 609 dispute letter covers the most-misunderstood section of the FCRA.