How to get your credit report for free

How to get your credit report for free

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  • You can get a free credit report from each of the three major credit bureaus once every week.
  • You can request your free credit reports through AnnualCreditReport.com or call 1-877-322-8228.
  • Regularly checking your reports can help protect against identity theft or credit reporting errors.

Your credit report is your financial report card, listing your present and past lines of credit, how much money you owe on each, and whether you have paid those bills on time or late. The information on this document can determine lending decisions, insurance rates, and even apartment rentals. This information also determines your credit score, a three-digit number between 300 and 850 that indicates how risky of a borrower you are.

With so much riding on this document, it’s important to check your report frequently to ensure the information is accurate. If something looks amiss, you could be a victim of identity theft. Here’s how to access free credit reports.

How to get your free credit report

While your credit score is readily available from several sources including financial institutions, lenders, and third-party credit monitoring services, you will have to do a little more work for your credit report. You can access free credit reports from the three major credit bureaus every week.

1. Go to AnnualCreditReport.com or call 1-877-322-8228

You can request your credit reports through AnnualCreditReport.com or by calling the verified phone number 1-877-322-8228. If another source claims to have your credit report in exchange for personal information, it’s probably a fraud. When you go to the website, double-check to make sure you’re on the right page. Scam websites will try to dress their pages up to make them look legitimate.

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Note: You can also request your credit reports by mail by sending a request form to the following address:

Annual Credit Report Request Service

P.O. Box 105281

Atlanta, GA 30348-5281

2. Fill out the online submission form

If you’re requesting through the website, you’ll have to fill out one submission form, regardless of whether you want one, two, or all three of your allotted credit reports. The form will ask for your name; your current address; your last address if you’ve lived at your current address for less than two years; and your Social Security number.

The next page has you select which credit bureaus you want reports from. The bureaus are given information about our credit-card histories from creditors, but they don’t all have the same information, which can lead to slight variations in the credit history recorded by each.

Before you can see your report, you’ll have to answer three or four multiple-choice questions to verify your identity. The information in these questions is taken from your credit report. They’re designed to be tricky (sometimes the correct answer is “none of the above”). You only have five minutes to answer the questions.

If you request a report from more than one credit bureau, you’ll have to complete this step for each one.

3. Review your report

The site will produce your credit report within a few seconds. If you request your report over the phone, it will be sent by mail and could take up to 15 days to arrive.

The report is separated into five sections:

  • Personal information: Your name, past and current addresses, year of birth, and phone numbers.
  • Accounts: This is where you’ll find the entire history of every line of credit you have or have had in the past — the current balance, date opened, the status of the account, highest balance, minimum payment, credit limit, etc.
  • Public records: If you have been involved in legal matters, filed for bankruptcy, or experienced a tax lien, it will be listed here.
  • Hard inquiries: If you have applied for a new credit card or loan in the last two years, the name of the lender will appear here with the date of the inquiry and the date it is set to expire.
  • Soft inquiries: If an employer, landlord, insurance company, or credit-card lender has ever made a soft inquiry into your credit, it will appear here. Soft inquiries don’t affect your credit score and thus aren’t disputable. Soft inquiries also don’t show up on the credit reports that lenders get when they pull a hard inquiry.
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4. If something looks wrong, file a dispute

If any of the details, such as a date, balance, or payment looks incorrect — or if there’s an entirely unrecognizable account — you can file a dispute directly from the online report, or by calling the credit bureau’s helpline.

All three bureaus offer paid identity-monitoring services, should you so choose. TransUnion, Experian, and Equifax’s services include unlimited credit reports, email alerts when someone applies for credit in your name, and ID theft insurance.

5. Print or save a copy for your records

You may want to either print a copy or save a PDF version for your records. If your session expires before you do this, you’ll have to wait until the next time your credit report is available.

Additional free credit reports

There are additional situations in which you can get free credit reports.

If you get an application rejected or experience another “adverse action” notice, you are entitled to a free credit report from the bureau that the lender used to review your credit. You need to request this credit report within 60 days of the initial rejection notice. Other adverse actions include denial of insurance or employment as a result of information on your credit report.

You can also request a credit report if you suspect that you will or have been the victim of identity theft. If you place an initial fraud alert on your credit, you can receive a free credit report from each bureau in addition to the annual free reports you usually get. An initial fraud alert requires credit bureaus to take steps to confirm your identity when they get a request to open a new line of credit. These last a year, at which point you can place another alert on your credit.

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Note: You only need to place an initial fraud alert with one bureau. That bureau will contact the other two.

On top of all these free reports, you can also sign up for a credit monitoring service or an identity theft protection service. The services will notify you of any changes to your credit reports, and may offer regular credit reports. While some of these services charge money, there’s an abundance of free credit report resources out there for you to take advantage of. For example, Experian, one of the three credit bureaus, offers its own free credit monitoring service that also shows you a copy of your credit report every 30 days.

Free credit reports frequently asked questions