by Matt Douglas

If you have ever tried to dispute items on your credit report, you may have received a response from the credit bureaus stating they performed their “investigation.” The bureaus may also tell you that they “verified” whatever item you disputed. This means that negative item will remain on your credit report.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) allows you to attach a 100-word essay to your credit report. This is the opportunity to explain the negative information and argue that you deserve new credit.

It may be difficult to resist the urge to proclaim your innocence by way of a consumer statement. You may feel the need to explain that the bad credit simply was not your fault or beyond your control.

Be cautious about adding a consumer statement to your credit file.

Do not mistake the 100-word statement for good faith on the part of the credit bureaus. As you will see, such a statement is usually used against your best interests.

Let’s assume that you were to attach a statement like this: “I was only late on my credit cards because I was laid off from work. Once I found another job I caught up on all my bills and have never been late since.”

The unexpected loss of employment may sound like a reasonable explanation to be late once or twice on a credit card bill. Plus, I would give that person credit for catching up on her bills and staying current since the bad financial spell.

Credit bureaus really could care less that your inability to pay your bills was due to no fault of your own. They see things in black and white. You either paid your bills on time (according to the creditor) or you did not pay your bills on time.

Instead, the credit bureaus see somebody who isn’t smart enough to have an emergency fund to cover basic minimum payments should something go wrong financially.

Writing a 100-word statement can damage your credit for three more reasons. First, such a statement only cements the fact that you paid your bill late. Second, the credit bureaus already have confirmation that the late payments are accurate. Thus, should you dispute the items in the future, the credit bureaus will ignore that dispute or deem it “frivolous.” Third, any future creditor will expect you not to pay them should you run into another financial emergency.

As you can see, there is no benefit to the consumer when they attach the consumer statement. In fact, the purpose of the statement is so old and out-dated that it probably should be simply abolished. It was part of the original Fair Credit Reporting Act enacted by Congress in the 1970′s. The statement has no purpose nowadays since most credit applications are reviewed electronically.

In today’s digital world most applications are reviewed electronically. Thus, such a statement only serves as another way for the credit bureaus to ignore your credit report dispute.

Briefly, the 100-word statement is dangerous to your credit file. It serves no good purpose for the consumer whatsoever.

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