Self Credit Repair - Part II

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It is very important to strategize your disputes in order to have a successful outcome.
Not many borrowers are aware that deleting negative items on your credit report can hurt your score.
One of the main factors in a credit score is the 'credit history'.
Whether it's positive/negative it will impact your score in a positive/negative way.
Derogatory accounts can be on your credit report for up to 7yrs from last activity.
The activity is being reported for 'credit history' and accounts for 15% of your score.
If the derog is much older than most of your credit accounts it is actually the account that is giving the positive affect on the score.
If you delete this derogatory it WILL lower your score.
Bankruptcies have been deleted from credit reports, and the scores have dropped with many individuals! Generally, a person who files bankruptcy starts rebuilding their credit after 2yrs.
All credit items listed under a bankruptcy is UNRATED towards your credit score.
The actual bankruptcy (listed under the Public Records section of your credit report) is the item that is RATED.
Many disputers are baffled when items listed under a bankruptcy doesn't raise the credit score after being deleted.
Make sure to compare the credit items on your credit report before disputing any items.
These helpful factors can help you dispute effectively: 1.
When the account was open 2.
When the account was first/last reported 3.
Last account activity date 4.
Original Creditor or Collection Company 5.
Duplicates with different companies for same account.
6.
Hard credit inquiries 7.
Transfer/Sold/Paid dates 8.
1st Delinquency date.
One of the foolish mistakes a Credit Repair agency may make is attempting to delete an item (from the original creditor), because of late payments.
What they're not realizing is that if the account is 'closed' or has been inactive for a while, the original creditor is less likely to respond back to the Credit Bureau.
This will result in a 'deletion' of a credit item in your 'credit history'.
They should be requesting 'payment history validation' to result in 'NEVER LATE' on your credit report.
Collection, bankruptcy, and lien items cannot be used for this tactic.
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