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If you don't have wads of cash stuffed in a mattress or locked
away in a safety deposit box, you've probably used credit to buy
some of the finer things in life-a college education, a car, a
boat or an engagement ring. Every purchase you make on credit
and fail to repay in full within a stated time (or fail to repay
at all) becomes part of your credit history. In the United States,
there are three major credit repositories that maintain enormous
databases that contain detailed personal financial information,
including debt and loan payments, residences, and whether a company
has taken action to collect on a debt. If you have ever purchased
anything on credit, or were granted a loan, you are probably on
file with one or more of these credit bureaus.
Experian (formerly TRW), Trans-Union, and Equifax are among the
largest credit reporting agencies in the country. They gather
credit information on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis from
credit card companies, mortgage lenders, utility companies, department
stores, and banks, and sell that information to companies that
extend credit to consumers-mortgage brokers, finance companies,
and department stores.
When they receive information, the credit bureaus add it to the
existing data in your file (which is continuously updated). If
you pay off a loan, for example, or are late with a credit card
payment, this information is entered into your file and becomes
available to companies that may purchase a credit history to check
on your financial situation. Credit reporting agencies share their
file information with each other which would lead one to believe
that they are all storing the same information. However, certain
data may not be reported or even updated to all of the companies.
That is why it is important to check your credit on an annual
basis to ensure the accuracy of the information they are reporting.
Sometimes for example, a reported collection account (an account
that is reporting that you stopped paying the debt) could have
been repaid in full but still shows up as a delinquent credit
account. By not checking your credit profile, you may be turned
down for credit later on because the credit bureaus are still
reporting the outstanding collection account.
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