Collection debt removed from one bureau still reports on other two after deletion
When a bureau removes an unverifiable collection account, the other two bureaus continue reporting it without coordinating on the deletion. Consumers must re-dispute independently at each bureau. Single complaint.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyDeleted collection accounts re-reported by new collectors after bureau removal
Creditors sell deleted debts to new collection agencies who re-report them to credit bureaus, circumventing the original investigation and deletion. This pattern of debt re-aging exploits gaps in inter-bureau coordination and FCRA enforcement. Consumers must repeat the entire dispute cycle for the same debt.
Debt Collector Reports Collection Account to Only One of Three Credit Bureaus
TEK-Collect reported a collection account to only one credit bureau, creating inconsistencies across Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion that confuse lenders and consumers. Debt collectors are not required to report to all three bureaus, enabling selective reporting practices that create unpredictable credit impacts. Cross-bureau inconsistency in collection account reporting complicates disputes and undermines credit report accuracy.
Inaccurate Unverified Collection Account on Credit File
A collection account appearing on a credit file is inaccurate and unverified, prompting a formal complaint. Standard credit dispute with no identifiable product gap beyond existing FCRA dispute mechanisms.
Unrecognized Collection Account on Credit Report Cannot Be Removed
Consumers discover collection accounts they never opened or owe on their credit reports and cannot get them removed despite disputes. This results from identity theft or collector errors. There is no fast, automated path to dispute and remove erroneous collection entries before credit damage compounds.
Paid and Resolved Debt Continues Reporting as Active Collection
A debt that was previously disputed, paid, and resolved reappears on a consumer's credit report as an active collection account. The same account has been through the full dispute cycle before but the collector re-reports it. Consumers have no mechanism to permanently block re-reporting of resolved accounts.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.