Do Credit Inquiries Hurt You?At the end of each credit report will be a log of inquiries. An inquiry notation is made each time someone requests a copy of your credit file from that credit bureau. Any company that receives a copy of your credit profile will be listed under this inquiry Section of your report. Lenders don't like to see a lot of inquiries on a credit report.
Excessive inquiries can result in a credit denial as easily as bad credit.
Thus, you will need to verify the type of inquires made and take steps to
remove any unauthorized inquiries. Not all inquires are viewed negatively.
In fact several types of inquires will not appear on any copy of your file
except for the copy you *There are six origins of inquiries: Your Existing Creditors (okay) Yourself (okay) The Bureau (okay) Potential Lenders (negative) IRS (negative) Anyone who has a judgment against you (negative) Although inquiries will remain on your file for up to 2 years, those in the last 6 months will count most heavily against you. Therefore, you should review the log to make certain that each inquiry was done with "permissible purpose" as explained in Section 604 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). (See Appendix R) The FCRA defines the "permissible purposes" for which consumer credit profiles can be provided to others. A credit report may be supplied if it's to be used for: Credit granting
considerations *The new FCRA, enacted in 1996, allows the FBI to access consumer credit reports in connection with an investigation of issues such as counterintelligence. So unless someone fits these categories, they should not be viewing your credit file. Anyone who knowingly and willfully obtains a credit report under false pretenses may be fined under title 18, United States Code, and imprisoned up to two year. Use the sample letters in Appendix D and Appendix E as a guide to dispute any unauthorized inquiries into your credit file so that they can be deleted form your report. If you don't have a lot of items to dispute, go ahead and send your letter to the credit bureau. However, if you know you are going to be sending the bureau several letters on other items over the next few months, you should try to take care of this with the creditor who requested your file. If you can take care of it by having them contact the bureau directly and deleting the request, then it is just one less letter you will have to send to the bureau yourself. Your letter of course will argue for the removal of the inquiry based on the assertion that... [Excerpted from Fresh Start: The Authoritative Guide To Consumer Credit Repair. This is just 1 of 6 major topics covered in Chapter 4]
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