All Pinnacle offices will be closed Monday, May 26, in observance of Memorial Day. You can see all bank holidays at PNFP.com/Holidays. Enjoy the weekend!
All Pinnacle offices will be closed Monday, May 26, in observance of Memorial Day. You can see all bank holidays at PNFP.com/Holidays. Enjoy the weekend!
In recent years, identity theft has been cited as the key reason to check your credit report on an annual basis. But a recent consumer report indicates another extremely important reason to regularly check your credit history for suspicious activity and errors.
A study by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group in Washington indicates that one in four credit reports has errors serious enough to keep you from buying a home, opening a bank account or getting a job. The federal government, for instance, runs background checks and sometimes uses credit history as a bona fide reason for turning down job applicants (particularly in positions where they don’t want employees who might easily be bribed).
A poll by the Society for Human Resources Management showed that about 35 percent of the companies surveyed pulled credit reports of current or potential employees last year. On the financial side, it isn’t very often that a credit report error keeps someone from getting a loan, but mistakes in your credit report can certainly slow down and complicate the approval process.
Of 197 credit reports surveyed from people in 30 states, 54 percent included personal identifying information that was misspelled, outdated, belonged to someone else or was otherwise incorrect. Thirty percent contained credit accounts that consumers had closed but that remained listed as open.
The federal government has also taken note of the problem. In December 2003, Congress passed the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACT Act), which is designed to improve the accuracy of credit reports. Thanks to the FACT Act, consumers are entitled to a free annual credit report on request.
Reporting errors
If you do find errors after requesting credit reports from all three major credit bureaus – Experian, Equifax and TransUnion, you should take the following actions:
Errors can also be reported electronically via the credit bureaus’ websites.
www.equifax.com (Equifax)
www.experian.com (Experian)
www.transunion.com (Trans Union)
After you’ve made your case
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