Credit Reports Available: Come And Get It

March 1, 2005 marks the initiation of Phase 2 of the free Annual Credit Report service under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACT Act) for residents of the Midwestern United States - Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin. Phase 1 for the Western states began on December 1, 2004. Phase 3 for the Southern states begins on June 1, 2005, and Phase 4 for the Eastern states and all U.S. Territories begins on September 1, 2005

In this age of identity misappropriation and fraud, it is essential for each individual to be at the very least conversant with their credit history. Ideally, one should be fully in control - not taking on more credit than one can afford, and optimizing value from the credit one has at hand.

The website for the free annual service is at AnnualCreditReport.com - not FreeCreditReport.com, a pay-site. AnnualCreditReport.com is a centralized service for consumers to request annual credit reports. It was created by the three nationwide consumer credit reporting companies, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. The interface is quite friendly and allows you to get a "credit file disclosure" from each of the three credit reporting agencies once every twelve months. Performance of the services is terrible at present - mainly because of the humogonous load on them. I recommend 2 AM this Saturday as a good time to get through. Be prepared to provide key identifying information such as your SSN, address details and revolving or installment credit account information.

You can also request your report by telephone from 1-877-322-8228 or by mail by sending the request form(PDF) to

Annual Credit Report Request Service
P.O. Box 105281
Atlanta, GA 30348-5281

The almighty credit score is not free with this service and will cost you approximately $5 at each of the agencies.

Personally, I pay for a Credit protection service from one of my major credit cards that keeps an eye, hopefully not a glad-eye, on my credit history and provides me quarterly summaries and scores. You can get a quarterly report free from the AnnualCreditReport.com service by requesting one from each of the agencies, round-robin, every quarter.

If you detect any unusual entries, notify the agencies and the FTC. You can also contact the FBI Internet Fraud Complaint Center or your local police.

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Article Author: Aaman Lamba

Aaman Lamba is a Blogcritics editor, as well as the Publisher of Desicritics.org, a Blogcritics network site covering media, politics, culture, sports and more with a global South Asian focus

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  • 1 - RJ

    Mar 01, 2005 at 8:53 pm

    I got a credit report a couple years ago, and there was some bizarre record from 1986 on there! I mean, I was a little kid back then! I didn't even have any friggin' credit cards!

    Also, some old credit cards I had discarded were still showing up as active on my report. I fixed that immediately.

    I highly recommend getting a full credit report on a fairly regular basis...

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