Who's Looking At Your Credit Report?
By Jill Terry
Most
of us know what credit reports are, but we don't always know
who's looking at them.
According to the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA),
anyone with a "legitimate business reason" can access your
credit report. People with such reasons generally fall into
one of the following categories:
1.
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Persons or places considering granting you credit
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2.
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Your request to see your report
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3.
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Court orders
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4.
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Landlords
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5.
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Insurance companies
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6.
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Government requests (State child support agencies,
the FBI, etc.)
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7.
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Employers and potential employers
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8.
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Companies where you have a credit account (for account
monitoring purposes)
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9.
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Companies who want to market "pre-approved" credit
cards to you
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Your Permission--Expressed or Implied?
Ironically, you are one of the few people who must ask permission
to access your credit report. To get a copy of your report
for your own use, you must specifically request it and pay
for it (unless you were declined credit because of information
contained on the report).
Other people or entities either don't need to ask permission
or simply need to notify you that they will be accessing your
credit report. Employers and potential employers have to provide
you with a clear and conspicuous written disclosure of their
intent to obtain your credit report, and you must sign it
to authorize procurement. If the employer takes any adverse
action on the basis of the contents of your credit report,
you are entitled to a free copy of your report and a description
of your rights. If you sign a release with your employer,
they are no longer required to tell you each time they run
a credit check on you.
Would you like to put an end to the flood of "pre-approved"
credit card solicitations? There is a way, and under Federal
law, you have the right to "opt out" of such solicitations.
Here's how it works:
Marketing firms that represent banks and insurance companies
typically specify the credit profiles they're looking for
in prospective customers. Then, credit-reporting agencies
draw up lists of consumers who satisfy the criteria and sell
the lists to the marketing firms. You have the option to exclude
yourself from those lists. Simply notify the credit bureaus
that you don't consent to any use of your report in any credit
or insurance transaction that you don't initiate. Each credit
bureau has its own "opt out" notification system designed
for this purpose, so inquire at each bureau to find out the
procedure. Your notification will keep your credit report
away from marketing firms for two years. After that, you must
file a new notification.
Of course, it's always a good idea to get a copy of your
credit report periodically just to see who's been checking
you out. Other than the marketing firms mentioned above, every
other viewer of your report must leave behind an "inquiry,"
which shows the date your report was provided to them. If
you can't always control who's looking at your report, at
least you can identify them after the fact.
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