Public Interest Research Group Survey
This is the PIRGs' sixth study on credit report accuracy and privacy issues
since 1991. The PIRGs have also participated in state and federal legislative
battles to improve credit reporting laws. This report is our first investigation
of credit report accuracy since 1996 Congressional changes to the federal
Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), designed to improve the accuracy and
ease of access to reports, took effect in September 1997. The findings
of Mistakes Can Happen are troubling. An alarming number of credit reports
contain serious errors that could cause the denial of credit, a loan,
or even a job. Further, some consumers never even received their reports,
even after repeated calls.
Among the major credit report accuracy findings of the survey: - Twenty-nine percent (29%) of the credit reports contained serious
errors - false delinquencies or accounts that did not belong to the
consumer - that could result in the denial of credit;
- Forty-one percent (41%) of the credit reports contained personal
demographic identifying information that was misspelled, long-outdated,
belonged to a stranger, or was otherwise incorrect;
- Twenty percent (20%) of the credit reports were missing major
credit, loan, mortgage, or other consumer accounts that demonstrate
the creditworthiness of the consumer;
- Twenty-six percent (26%) of the credit reports contained credit
accounts that had been closed by the consumer but incorrectly remained
listed as open;
- Altogether, 70% of the credit reports contained either serious
errors or other mistakes of some kind.
Among the survey's major access to credit report findings:
- Of the consumers that did obtain their credit reports, at least
14% of them were forced to call back 3 or more times after receiving
busy signals or had to write a letter in order to receive their report;
- And 12% of the consumers waited two weeks or longer to receive
their report once they finished requesting it. It took more than a month
for one California man to receive his report.
- Overall, 15% of consumers who attempted to participate in the
survey either made at least 3 phone calls and never got through or requested
their reports but never received them.
To read the full report, click
here.
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