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Take Advantage of Free Credit Reports
By Lyle Hansen
Jerome County,
UI Extension Educator/Personal Finance
As of September 1, 2005, thanks to the Fair and Accurate
Credit Transaction Act of 2003 (FACTA), all Americans are able to obtain one (1) free
copy of their credit report from each of the three (3) major credit bureaus: Equifax, Experian and Trans Union once a year. This is
great news for all of us! To get a credit report in the past we either had to be denied credit and then we
could request a free report or we had to pay $9.50. It is also a good idea to
check your credit report every year to help guard against identity theft, look
for accounts we did not open, look for discrepancies between credit bureaus,
identify accounts that are still open that we thought we closed and identify any
unexplained transactions. Ordering your free credit reports does not affect
your credit or credit score making it that much more of a reason to obtain your
free credit reports.
How to order a free copy of your credit report:
The three major credit bureaus have set up a central
website
www.annualcreditreport.com, a toll-free telephone number
1-877-322-8228, and
a mailing address Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. Box
105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281 through which you can order your free annual
report. If you want to request your free credit report through the mail print
and use the form from
www.ftc.gov/credit. You can also find lots of useful information about
credit on the website. The credit bureaus have set up the
www.annualcreditreport.com website to guard your privacy using security
protocols designed to protect your personally identifiable information from
unauthorized access or alteration. They us measures that include physical and
technological security and encryption to protect you while ordering your credit
report on line.
When ordering your free credit report make sure you only
use the ways listed above because there are imposter websites out there that
claim to offer free credit reports but often have strings attached that end up
costing consumers money. Some imposter sites have free report in their names;
others have URLs that purposely misspell
www.annualcreditreport.com in the hope that you will mistype the name of the
official site. Some of these imposter sites direct you to other sites that try
to sell you something or collect your personal information. The only website
under the law authorized to fill free credit report requests is
www.annualcreditreport.com.
Ordering your three free credit reports each year will help
you make sure that your personal credit is accurate and will help you monitor
for possible identity theft.
For further
information or questions you can contact Lyle Hansen, University of Idaho
Extension Educator in Jerome County at 324-7578 or
lhansen@uidaho.edu

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