Pehaps, but in most cases it would be temporary, as the majority of judgments are renewable and can legally be reentered on a CR. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Judgement will "fall off" of your credit as long as the Plaintiff does not petition the court again. I am speaking first hand here! Y-THINK-Y
No. It will show that you had a judgment on your credit report for up to seven years, but it will show a zero balance.
ya after they fall off in 7 to 10 years depending on the type of judgment
A judgment will reduce you credit score. It takes about 7 years for an item on your credit report to be removed. You have to make a request for it to be remove from your credit after you 7 year period.
not if you never had any activity on the account after 7 years they have to remove it you can request that it be removed by contacing the 3 credit agencies
No, judgments remain on a credit report for seven years. Some types of judgments are renewable and therefore can remain on a report an indefinite amount of time. If you are willing to pay a fine, why not just pay the judgment?
No. It will show that you had a judgment on your credit report for up to seven years, but it will show a zero balance.
The judgment should be removed from your credit report 7 years from the date it was entered.
ya after they fall off in 7 to 10 years depending on the type of judgment
A judgment will reduce you credit score. It takes about 7 years for an item on your credit report to be removed. You have to make a request for it to be remove from your credit after you 7 year period.
Negative information cannot be removed from a credit report until the time limit for the debt has expired. The time limit for most judgments is 7 years.
The expired judgment falls off your credit report when it expires or seven years after first being reported, whichever is longer.
No! By Federal Law all judgements must be removed from your credit report 7 years from the filin date.
not if you never had any activity on the account after 7 years they have to remove it you can request that it be removed by contacing the 3 credit agencies
Eviction judgments are removed after the required 7 years have elapsed. In some instances, if the eviction resulted in a judgment and said judgment is renewable it can be reentered on the debtor's CR when renewed.
AnswerIf it was true and accurate, no. maybeThat is often state dependant, but you should be able to have it removed once the debt is paid. If it is not paid yet, it is considered outstanding debt, and will stay on your credit report. No a valid judgment will remain 7 years or indefinitely if the judgment creditor chooses to renew it.If a judgment is paid or settled the entry will reflect such, but the judgment will still remain on the CR for a minimum of 7 years.YesOnly the court or the credit bureaus can remove judgments on your credit report. You can dispute anything on your credit report to the credit bureaus that you believe to be inaccurate or erroneous.
Satisfied judgments do not get removed from a consumer's credit report until 7 years from the date they were filed. You might get lucky and the judgment be shielded from view 7 years after the original legal action was filed (once the satisfaction shows). It is possible, and legal, for the satisfaction to show for 7 full years from it's filing date (which may be different from the judgment filing date).
7 yrs AFTER the date of the judgment, fed law requires the judgment to be removed from your credit file.