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Finding an account on your credit report that you did not open can be stressful. It may be a credit card, loan, collection account, utility account, phone account, or financing account created using your personal information.
The key is to act quickly and dispute the account with both the credit bureau and the company that reported it.
In this guide, you’ll learn how to dispute fraudulent accounts on your credit report and what records to keep during the process.
Before filing disputes, make sure the account truly does not belong to you. Some credit report entries may appear under unfamiliar names because a lender, store card, or collection agency reports under a parent company or servicing company.
Check:
The CFPB says common credit report errors include accounts belonging to someone else, accounts resulting from identity theft, incorrect balances, wrong payment status, and unfamiliar inquiries.
What to do:
Write down every fraudulent account and which bureau is reporting it: Equifax, Experian, TransUnion, or more than one. Save a copy of each credit report before you start disputing.
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If the account was opened because someone used your identity, file an identity theft report at IdentityTheft.gov. This creates an FTC Identity Theft Report and recovery plan.
IdentityTheft.gov is the federal government’s recovery resource for identity theft and provides step-by-step guidance, checklists, and sample letters.
What to do:
Smile Money Tip: Your Identity Theft Report gives your dispute more weight. It helps show the account is not just inaccurate, but the result of identity theft.
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You need to dispute the fraudulent account with every credit bureau that shows it. If the account appears on all three reports, dispute it with all three.
The FTC says you should dispute with each credit bureau that has the mistake, explain in writing what is wrong, include supporting documents, and keep records of everything you send.
Include:
The Fair Credit Reporting Act requires credit reporting agencies to block information that resulted from alleged identity theft within four business days after receiving proof of identity, an identity theft report, identification of the fraudulent information, and a statement from the consumer.
What to do:
Submit disputes online or by mail, but keep proof. If mailing, use certified mail so you can track delivery. Save copies of everything.
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Disputing with the credit bureau is important, but you should also contact the company that opened or reported the account.
The CFPB recommends disputing directly with both the credit reporting company and the company that provided the information.
What to do:
Ask the company to:
Send your Identity Theft Report and any requested proof of identity. Keep notes from phone calls, but follow up in writing when possible.
Credit disputes take time. Do not assume everything is fixed after submitting the dispute.
The FTC says credit bureaus generally investigate disputes within 30 days. Furnishers, which are companies that provide information to credit reporting companies, generally must investigate and respond to direct disputes within 30 days of receiving them.
What to do:
Create a simple tracker with:
After the investigation, pull updated credit reports and confirm the fraudulent account was removed or blocked.
If the fraudulent account remains:
The CFPB accepts complaints about credit reporting and sends them to companies for response.
Not always. An FTC Identity Theft Report is often enough, but a police report may help if a company asks for it or if you know who opened the account.
Either can work, but mail gives you a stronger paper trail if you use certified mail. Keep copies no matter how you submit.
It can happen. Keep records and check your credit reports again after the dispute is resolved.
Disputing a fraudulent account is not just about fixing a credit report. It is about proving the debt is not yours and stopping the damage from spreading.
File the identity theft report, dispute with every bureau reporting the account, contact the company directly, and keep records until the account is fully resolved.
Next Steps:
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