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Question by June Baby: How can you get your credit report without joining a club and give out your credit card number?
All of these free credit report on the internet require your credit card info and want oyu to join a club which is totally crazy to me. If I need to join a club I would have asked for membership info. So there is no such thing as free credit reoprt at all?

Best answer:

Answer by bdancer222
AnnualCreditReport.com is the site mandated by the FTC to allow you online access to your free annual credit reports from each of the three credit bureaus. Reports are free; scores are not.

CreditKarma.com offers a free score estimator based on your TransUnion credit report. It’s not FICO (the score creditors use). But it’s kinda, sorta like FICO, give or take 50 points or so. Good enough if you are just curious about your score.

What do you think? Answer below!

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The Battery Reconditioning Report
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Check out these Credit Report images:

Duke Energy’s Cliffside Coal Plant
Credit Report
Image by Rainforest Action Network
RAN activists holding a banner in front of Duke Energy’s Cliffside coal plant in Cliffside, North Carolina. The banner action coincided with the release of a new report, The Principle Matter: Banks, Climate & The Carbon Principles.

Duke Energy’s Cliffside Coal Plant
Credit Report
Image by Rainforest Action Network
RAN activists holding a banner in front of Duke Energy’s Cliffside coal plant in Cliffside, North Carolina. The banner action coincided with the release of a new report, The Principle Matter: Banks, Climate & The Carbon Principles.

How to Get a Free Credit Report and Why You Should

Finding out your credit rating or credit score might seem like a mysterious and challenging ordeal, but it really isn’t. It’s possible—and surprisingly easy—to get a free credit report each year. This will help you to annually monitor your credit, ensure that your credit card and loan payments are reported accurately, and protect your identity from being infringed upon.

What is a Credit Report?

A credit report is a document that lists events in your recent history that impact your credit rating or credit score. Any loans, credit cards, or other debts incurred over the past 7 years can and should be included on a credit report. Some information – such as past bankruptcies or unpaid tax liens – stays on a credit report for longer, while certain types of credit checks, like those for high-salaried jobs, will pull up all credit information from the very beginning of your history.

A credit report is usually summarized in a credit score, a number between 300 and 900 that tells banks and other lenders how trustworthy you are and how sound of a lending investment you might be.

Why Should I Check My Credit Report?

Your credit report is supposed to include transactions and history for you and only you. That’s why it’s connected to your name and social security number – so that employers, loan officers, credit cards, landlords, and anyone else who might check your credit report knows they are receiving information about the right person.

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But in cases of identity theft – a growing problem in the United States – thieves will use your personal information, such as credit card and social security numbers, to steal money or secure a loan or credit card that they never intend to pay back. These kinds of transactions can have a serious impact on your credit score – one that victims don’t usually learn about until months or even years later, when they are denied a mortgage or passed over for a job offer. Occasionally, there are legitimate mistakes in credit reports that are easy to correct if they’re caught right away, and all but impossible to erase if they’re left for a while.

The best way to prevent these problems is to check your credit score regularly by ordering a copy of your credit report.

Free Annual Credit Report

By federal law, every consumer is entitled to a free copy of their credit report each year. These reports aren’t sent automatically, but it is possible to request one from each of the three major credit reporting agencies, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Each of these reports may have slightly different information, since banks and lenders only report to one or two of these agencies. However, someone checking your credit score may choose to look at all three, so it’s important to keep them accurate and up to date.

Your free annual credit report will not include a FICO credit score – the number between 300 and 900 – but it will give you all of the credit information that banks and agencies use to calculate that number.

It’s possible to order your free credit report by phone, mail, or online:

-By Phone: Call (877) 322-8228

-By Mail: An Annual Credit Report Request form must be ordered from the Federal Trade Commission and mailed to Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281. You can also print the form at ftc.gov/credit.

-Online: AnnualCreditReport.com is the sole authorized site, although many other websites offer a free credit report (but in order to get the report you must sign up for a credit monitoring service).

ConsumerFinanceReport.com features an extensive library of articles providing information, commentary, and guidance on a variety of personal finance issues and topics, such as the article on how to get a free credit report. Additional content helps consumers understand bankruptcy facts and ways to pay off debt.

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