The Fair Credit Reporting Act

Guide last updated: April 17, 2026. Hazard class: financial. Civic education by a Concerned Parent.

The short version

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is a federal law that sets rules for how the big three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) and other consumer reporting agencies handle your information. It gives you specific rights to see your report, dispute errors, and limit how your information is used.

What the FCRA covers

The FCRA applies to "consumer reports" — information about you that is used to make decisions about credit, insurance, employment, rentals, and a few other categories. It covers the big three credit bureaus but also many other specialty reporting agencies (tenant screening, employment background checks, medical information).

Your main rights under the FCRA

What to do if you find an error

  1. Download your report from annualcreditreport.com.
  2. Identify the specific item that is wrong. Be precise — "the account from XYZ Bank opened 2023-06-15 for $5,000" is better than "a wrong account."
  3. Dispute the item in writing with the credit bureau. Certified mail with return receipt is the durable record. Most bureaus also accept online disputes.
  4. Include supporting documents (but send copies, not originals).
  5. Keep a copy of everything you send.
  6. The bureau has 30 days to investigate (sometimes extended to 45). If they cannot verify the information, they must remove it.

If the dispute doesn't work

If the bureau confirms the information but you still believe it is wrong, you have additional options: disputing directly with the furnisher (the creditor or other party that reported the information), filing a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, or — for serious or recurring problems — consulting a consumer-protection attorney. Some attorneys take FCRA cases on a contingency basis because the statute includes attorney's fees for successful plaintiffs.

Specialty reports (tenant screening, employment, medical)

Your credit report is not the only consumer report. Tenant-screening reports, employment background checks, check-verification reports, and medical-information reports are also covered by the FCRA and have their own dispute procedures. If you've been denied a rental, a job, or a check, ask which company supplied the report — you have a right to know.

What this guide does not cover