Resumen de la guía
Lo que cubre esta guía
Tiene derecho a informes crediticios gratuitos. Aquí se explica cómo obtenerlos de Equifax, Experian y TransUnion.
You're entitled to free credit reports. Here's how to get them from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
Resumen de la guía
Tiene derecho a informes crediticios gratuitos. Aquí se explica cómo obtenerlos de Equifax, Experian y TransUnion.
Marco
Análisis profundo
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Section 612 guarantees every U.S. consumer one free credit report per year from each of the three national bureaus: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. The only federally authorized source is AnnualCreditReport.com, a joint venture operated by the bureaus under FTC supervision. Third-party sites advertising free reports often bundle paid monitoring subscriptions.
Since April 2020, all three bureaus have extended free weekly report access through AnnualCreditReport.com indefinitely. This expansion, originally a pandemic-era measure, allows consumers to track changes and verify dispute results without waiting 12 months between pulls. Each weekly request generates a full report identical to the annual version.
Additional free reports are available under specific circumstances codified in the FCRA. Consumers denied credit, insurance, or employment based on credit data receive a free report from the bureau used if requested within 60 days of the adverse action notice. Fraud victims who place fraud alerts are entitled to free reports from all three bureaus. Consumers on state or federal public assistance programs also qualify.
The request process requires identity verification through personal questions drawn from your credit file. You must provide your full legal name, current and previous addresses, Social Security number, and date of birth. The system generates knowledge-based authentication questions about your accounts, such as confirming a mortgage lender name or monthly payment amount.
You can request reports from one, two, or all three bureaus in a single session. Each bureau delivers a separate report because they maintain independent databases. Requesting all three simultaneously allows side-by-side comparison, which is essential for identifying bureau-specific errors. If identity verification fails online, you can request reports by mail using the Annual Credit Report Request Form.
Reports are viewable online immediately and can be downloaded as PDFs for permanent records. Online viewing sessions typically expire after a set period, so downloading is recommended. Save reports with the date in the filename for organized record-keeping, especially if you plan to file disputes and need to reference the original report against updated versions.
The personal information section lists your name variations, current and previous addresses, Social Security number (partially masked), date of birth, and employer history as reported by creditors. This section does not directly affect your credit score but errors here can signal identity mix-ups or fraud.
Review every name variation listed. Misspellings of your name, unfamiliar aliases, or a former spouse's name could indicate that another person's accounts are being mixed into your file. Address histories you do not recognize may suggest that someone has used your identity to open accounts at a different location.
Incorrect employer information does not impact scoring but can cause problems during mortgage underwriting or employment background checks. Creditors report employer data as provided on applications, so outdated or inaccurate entries typically reflect old information from prior applications rather than fraud. You can dispute incorrect personal information through the same process used for account disputes.
The account history section, also called the tradeline section, lists every credit account reported in your name. Each tradeline includes the creditor name, account number (partially masked), account type (revolving, installment, mortgage), date opened, credit limit or loan amount, current balance, payment status, and monthly payment history going back up to seven years.
Verify the accuracy of each tradeline by comparing reported balances and limits against your most recent account statements. A credit card reported with a lower limit than actual will inflate your utilization ratio and suppress your score. An installment loan showing a higher balance than actual overstates your debt load. Payment history should reflect your records exactly, with no late payments you did not actually make.
Pay special attention to account status codes. An account reported as 'charged off' when you settled the debt, or 'open' when you closed it, affects both your score and how lenders interpret your file. Accounts reported as 'derogatory' or 'in collections' that do not belong to you require immediate disputes. Each incorrect negative tradeline can suppress your score by 50 to 100 points.
Credit inquiries fall into two categories: hard inquiries from credit applications you authorized, and soft inquiries from pre-approved offers, employer checks, or your own report pulls. Only hard inquiries affect your score, reducing it by approximately 2 to 5 points each. Hard inquiries remain on your report for two years but only affect scoring for the first 12 months.
FICO scoring treats multiple inquiries for the same loan type within a 14 to 45 day window as a single inquiry, depending on the FICO version. This rate-shopping protection applies to mortgages, auto loans, and student loans but not credit cards. If you see multiple hard inquiries from a single loan shopping period, they should be counted as one for scoring purposes.
The public records section previously included bankruptcies, tax liens, and civil judgments. Since 2017, tax liens and civil judgments have been removed from credit reports under the National Consumer Assistance Plan. Only bankruptcies remain in this section: Chapter 7 bankruptcies stay for 10 years from the filing date, and Chapter 13 bankruptcies stay for 7 years from the filing date.
File disputes with each bureau that reports an error, since bureaus do not share dispute results with each other. Under the FCRA, bureaus must investigate within 30 days (45 days if you submit additional information during the investigation). If the furnisher cannot verify the disputed item, the bureau must remove or correct it and send you an updated report at no charge.
Track dispute progress using confirmation numbers provided at submission. Online disputes through bureau websites show status updates in real time. Mail disputes should include copies (never originals) of supporting documents sent via certified mail with return receipt. Keep a dispute log recording submission dates, confirmation numbers, and outcomes for each item.
After disputes resolve, pull updated reports to verify corrections were applied. Some furnishers re-report deleted items in subsequent data submissions, causing previously removed errors to reappear. If a deleted item returns, the FCRA requires the bureau to notify you within five business days and provides an expedited reinsertion dispute process with a higher burden of proof on the furnisher.
Resumen
Lista de verificación
Visit AnnualCreditReport.com and pull Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion reports simultaneously for side-by-side comparison.
Save each report with the date in the filename before your online viewing session expires.
Check name variations, addresses, and SSN for signs of identity mix-ups or unauthorized use.
Compare reported balances, limits, and payment history against your own account statements for each creditor.
Identify hard inquiries you did not authorize and confirm that rate-shopping clusters are grouped correctly.
Submit disputes to each bureau showing errors, including copies of statements, receipts, or identification as evidence.
Preguntas frecuentes
Yes. It is the only site authorized by federal law under the FCRA for free annual credit reports. The site is operated jointly by Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion under FTC oversight. There is no credit card required and no subscription attached.
With free weekly access currently available, checking once per quarter is a reasonable baseline. Check more frequently if you are actively disputing errors, preparing for a major credit application, or have recently been a fraud victim. At minimum, review all three reports once per year.
Each bureau maintains its own database and not all creditors report to all three. A creditor might report to Experian and TransUnion but not Equifax, or report different balances due to timing differences in data submission cycles.
No. Checking your own report through AnnualCreditReport.com or any consumer access channel is classified as a soft inquiry and has zero impact on your credit score. Only hard inquiries from lender credit decisions affect scoring.