Monday, June 25, 2007

How to repair your credit and get ready to purchase Real Estate

Mortgage lenders generally check with three credit bureaus in order to evaluate your past payment history. Your goal in cleaning up your credit report should be to clean up each of the three bureaus. If you only work on one, this does not effect the reporting to the other bureaus. Mortgage lenders use the middle of the three scores in order to qualify you for an interest rate so raising all three scores is very important.

The following are the steps you need to follow in order to improve your credit.
The first step is to get a copy of your merged credit report, which shows all three of the major bureaus, Experian (formerly TRW), Equifax (formerly CBI), and Trans-Union. Most mortgage lenders will obtain data from all three of these bureaus in analyzing your credit history. The exception is that some portfolio lenders (usually adjustable rate lenders) may only review one. You can do this free once a year as mandated by federal law or if you have been denied credit. I can supply you with the proper letters at www.cficmontana.com.

Contact your Creditors

There are two efforts that must be made. First, call any creditors reporting a negative and ask them to remove the negative item. Ask in a nice voice and do not get upset when they say no. Simply repeat your request over and over in your nice pleasant voice. If you get nowhere, then ask to speak to the supervisor. Make sure you keep a log of your conversation, noting the date, time, who you spoke to and what they said. Repeat this procedure over and over. In a high percentage of cases, it works!

Get written conformation of agreements

Be sure to ask for a letter by mail or fax that shows the creditor is correcting the negative information. You may need this letter for two reasons. First, they may not actually make the changes. With the letter, you can appeal directly to the credit bureau and they will make the correction. Second, if you are applying for a mortgage before the changes actually hit the credit bureau’s report; your lender will need this documentation.
If you have a charge off or collection account that shows as unpaid, don’t just send them a check and pay it off. Call the creditor on the phone, explain that you have the funds to pay the account in full, and calmly explain why it should not have been reported on your credit in the first place. Then ask if they will provide you a letter deleting the account entirely from all credit bureaus if you pay off the account. Try to get them to fax it to you. As before, be sure to document all of your telephone contact and always keep a nice pleasant tone in your voice. In a large percentage of cases, this also works.

Your Creditor Will Not Remove an Item

There will be cases when the creditor does not agree to remove the negative credit item. If it is an item that is definitely not yours, call the credit bureau immediately (except for Equifax, who only responds by mail). When on the telephone, do not discuss any negative items that are accurate. Do not discuss any items that may be accurate in general but have some small error in detail that you can dispute by mail. Once you confirm any accuracy at all, you cannot dispute it later by mail.
For the remaining items, you need to dispute them by mail, writing directly to the credit bureaus. Write a letter to the appropriate bureau including your name, social security number, address, disputed accounts, and account numbers. You must sign the letter. Inform the bureau that you are disputing the data as it appears on your credit report. I can also give you examples of letters I use daily to remove incorrect information at www.cficmontana.com. I have been repairing credit for years and I have a proven system that will help you correct you credit and raise your scores

Trevor Riggs
Sr. Loan Officer License #000358
CFIC Home Mortgage
www.cficmontana.com
Questions you can email me at Trevor.riggs@cficmontana.com

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