Детальний розбір
Покроковий розбір
Крок 1. Правила допустимої мети: коли жорсткий запит законний
Every hard inquiry on a credit report must trace back to a permissible purpose defined in FCRA Section 604(a). The statute lists specific permitted uses: credit transactions, insurance underwriting, employment screening (with consumer consent), legitimate business transactions initiated by the consumer, court orders, and account review by existing creditors. If an inquiry does not fit one of these categories, the entity that pulled the report violated the FCRA, and the inquiry should not appear on the consumer file.
Permissible purpose is entity-specific, not consumer-specific. The burden is on the party that accessed the report to prove they had a permissible purpose, not on the consumer to prove they did not. This distinction matters for disputes: when you challenge an inquiry as unauthorized, the bureau contacts the inquiring party and asks them to confirm their permissible purpose. If the inquiring party cannot or does not respond within the investigation window, the inquiry must be removed.
CFPB complaint data shows that unauthorized inquiry complaints are among the fastest-growing categories in credit reporting disputes. Many of these involve dealer-initiated multiple inquiries during auto shopping, pre-qualification pulls that were supposed to be soft but were coded as hard, and data broker-initiated pulls where the consumer had no direct relationship with the inquiring entity.
- FCRA Section 604(a) defines six categories of permissible purpose for credit report access
- The inquiring party bears the burden of proving permissible purpose, not the consumer
- Failure to confirm permissible purpose during dispute investigation requires inquiry removal
- Unauthorized inquiry complaints are among the fastest-growing CFPB complaint categories
- Dealer-initiated multiple pulls and miscoded soft inquiries are common permissible purpose violations
Крок 2. Вплив запитів на кредитний бал: реальні цифри
Hard inquiries affect credit scores differently depending on the scoring model. FICO models weigh inquiries at approximately 10% of the total score calculation under the 'New Credit' category. VantageScore also considers inquiries but weights them within a combined 'Recent Credit' and 'Credit Behavior' factor. The actual point impact of a single inquiry ranges from 0 to about 10 points for most consumers, with the exact impact depending on the consumer's overall credit profile. Thin-file consumers with few accounts see larger per-inquiry point deductions than consumers with established files.
Both FICO and VantageScore implement 'deduplication' windows for rate shopping. FICO Score 8 treats multiple inquiries from auto, mortgage, or student loan lenders within a 45-day window as a single inquiry for scoring purposes. Older FICO models used a 14-day window. VantageScore uses a 14-day rolling window across all inquiry types. This means rate shopping for a mortgage by applying to multiple lenders within two weeks will not produce the score damage that the raw inquiry count might suggest.
Hard inquiries remain on the credit report for 24 months but stop affecting FICO scores after 12 months. This creates a six-month window where an inquiry is still visible to manual underwriters reviewing the report but is no longer factored into the automated score. VantageScore also reduces inquiry weight over time, but the precise decay curve is not publicly disclosed. After 24 months, the inquiry drops off the report entirely, regardless of whether a dispute was filed.
- FICO weights inquiries at approximately 10% of score under 'New Credit'
- Single inquiry impact ranges from 0-10 points depending on overall credit profile
- FICO 8 deduplication window: 45 days for auto, mortgage, and student loan inquiries
- Hard inquiries stop affecting FICO scores after 12 months but remain visible for 24 months
- Thin-file consumers experience larger per-inquiry score deductions than established-file consumers
Крок 3. Процедура оскарження несанкціонованих запитів
Disputing a hard inquiry follows a different process than disputing a tradeline. When you dispute an inquiry, the bureau contacts the inquiring party and asks them to confirm the permissible purpose. The inquiry is not run through e-OSCAR in the same way as tradeline disputes because the inquiring party is not a 'furnisher' in the traditional sense -- they did not furnish account data, they accessed the file. The inquiry investigation is handled through a separate verification pathway.
Realistic expectations: inquiries from lenders where you actually applied for credit are legitimate and will be verified. Disputing a hard inquiry from a credit card issuer where you submitted an application is extremely unlikely to result in removal. The inquiry is properly recorded, the permissible purpose (credit transaction initiated by the consumer) is clear, and the lender will confirm it upon investigation.
Inquiries that are most likely to be removed through disputes include: pulls from companies you never authorized or interacted with, dealer-initiated pulls where you gave permission to one dealer but your application was shopped to multiple lenders, pulls resulting from identity theft, and inquiries that should have been coded as soft pulls (pre-qualification, account review, promotional) but were incorrectly recorded as hard inquiries. Focus dispute energy on these categories rather than attempting to remove all inquiries.
- Inquiry disputes do not go through e-OSCAR -- they use a separate bureau verification pathway
- Inquiries from lenders where you applied are legitimate and will almost certainly be verified
- Highest removal probability: unauthorized pulls, dealer shotgunning, identity theft, miscoded soft pulls
- Disputing legitimate inquiries wastes investigation capacity and can flag your file for pattern detection
- Focus dispute resources on inquiries you genuinely did not authorize or recognize
Крок 4. Графіки старіння та автоматичного видалення
When an entity pulls a credit report, they submit a permissible purpose code to the bureau. These codes map to the Section 604 categories. In practice, the most common codes are: credit transaction (you applied for credit), insurance underwriting, employment (with consent), existing account review, and prescreened offer. The existing account review code is frequently used by credit card issuers conducting periodic reviews of current cardholders -- these should always be soft inquiries and should not appear in the hard inquiry section.
A systemic problem occurs when entities submit the wrong purpose code. A credit card issuer running an existing account review is supposed to code the pull as account review (soft), but if their system defaults to the credit transaction code, it appears as a hard inquiry on the consumer's report. These miscoded pulls are legitimate targets for inquiry disputes. The challenge is identifying them: if you have an existing account with the inquiring company but did not apply for new credit, a hard inquiry from them warrants investigation.
Promotional inquiries -- the soft pulls used to generate pre-approved credit offers -- should never appear as hard inquiries. Under FCRA Section 604(c), these promotional pulls require specific coding and are prohibited from being shown as hard inquiries on consumer reports. If a promotional inquiry appears in your hard inquiry section, it is a coding error that the bureau should correct without a dispute being necessary, though in practice a dispute is usually required to trigger the correction.
- Most common permissible purpose codes: credit transaction, insurance, employment, account review, prescreened offer
- Existing account review pulls should always be soft inquiries -- hard coding is an error
- Promotional inquiries under Section 604(c) are prohibited from appearing as hard inquiries
- Wrong purpose code submissions are a systemic problem creating improper hard inquiries
- Check whether you have an existing relationship with any hard inquiry source -- if so, investigate the coding
Крок 5. Об'єднання запитів при порівнянні пропозицій
When hard inquiries result from identity theft, the removal process involves additional steps beyond a standard dispute. Filing an FTC Identity Theft Report at IdentityTheft.gov creates a standardized affidavit that bureaus are required to accept. Under FCRA Section 605B, once a bureau receives an identity theft report and a proper block request, it must block the fraudulent information -- including inquiries -- within 4 business days. This timeline is shorter than the standard 30-day investigation window.
Each inquiry from an identity theft event represents a potential application in your name. Beyond removing the inquiry, consumers should contact the inquiring entity directly to determine whether an account was opened. If accounts were opened, those tradelines also need to be blocked. The inquiry itself is the visible marker, but the underlying fraud may have produced additional damage that only shows up after the inquiry is investigated.
Placing a security freeze (sometimes called a credit lock) with all three bureaus prevents new hard inquiries from being created. Under the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act of 2018, security freezes are free for all consumers. Freezes must be placed with each bureau separately: Equifax, Experian, TransUnion, and optionally Innovis and NCTUE (National Consumer Telecom and Utilities Exchange). A freeze does not remove existing inquiries -- it only prevents new ones.
- FTC Identity Theft Reports at IdentityTheft.gov create standardized affidavits bureaus must accept
- FCRA Section 605B requires blocking of identity theft items within 4 business days of receiving the report
- Each fraudulent inquiry may represent an account opened in your name -- investigate beyond the inquiry itself
- Security freezes are free under the 2018 Economic Growth Act and must be placed with each bureau separately
- Freezes prevent new inquiries but do not remove existing ones