You can always purchase a car. Getting financing for a car may be more difficult, but that's true for anyone with compromised credit. Regardless of your credit, shop around to find the best deal you can with your history.
Yes. If they extend the line of credit to you, and you do not activate it, it will still show up on your credit report.
The foreclosure will be on your credit report indefinitely.
Yes you do, unless you want a bad mark on your credit report!!!
Yes, because it is still a reposession, even if you agree to it. It's irrelevant anyway since a BK is far more damaging than anything they might say to your credit.
It is treated as a voluntary reposession and it still hurts your credit. They will auction the car and you will pay the difference of your loan and the amount they get from auction.
If 1099 c is received and the debt is cancelled means that it still remains on your credit report.
If it isn't on your credit report, the credit card company still has hopes of you paying it off. When they see that isn't going to happen, you can bet your butt that it WILL be on your credit report.
It depend on the individual credit card companies if they report on your credit history or not, like some department store credit cards may not show on a credit report
If you are responsible for that item, then, yes, it can stay on your credit report--probably indefinitely.
If it has been 19 years and something is still showing on a credit report, you can request to have it removed. Contact the three credit reporting bureaus and ask all of them to remove it for you.
If the account is legitimately yours, then you cannot legally have it removed from your credit report. However, if you paid the collection account off, it should be reported as paid on your credit report. Still, the accounts will not be removed from your credit report for 7 years.
Bankruptcy can stay on your credit report for up to 10 years. If you obtain the credit report directly from the credit reporting agency (ie. Equifax, Transunion, Experion) the report will provide you with directions on how to dispute the information.