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7 Years
7 years
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.
7 years and is collectable at 12 % interest
Credit reports are national, not from state to state. A judgment will stay on your credit 7-10 years depending on the type of judgment regardless of what state you live in.
I recvd a granishment on an employees wages- the judgement was filed 7 years ago, is this past SOL ?
Actually, the creditor who has the judgment against you can make appeals on it and depending on what state your in you can actually end up with it on your credit report for as long as 21 years. Now there is only one state that will allow it to stay for 21 years through appeal but most are between an additional 7 to 14 years on top of the initial 7.AnswerCall who ever has the judgment pay them.....it's that or wait it out for 7 years that's how long it will stay on the report
Yes, if the employer pays for a judgment search to take place. However, judgments can only legally reported under FCRA for the past 7 years to conduct a judgment search.
The ten year rule is from the date of the court's judgment; regardless of any previous agreement.
check google
Yes, just dispute them as too old to be on your report. Closed positive information reports for 10 years and negative information reports for 7 years.
In the majority of cases a judgment will remain on you record for 7 years. In the case of Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the judgment can be reported for 10 years. The FCRA (Fair Credit Reporting Act) allows for a judgment to be reported for a period of no longer than 7 years, but this is not mandatory for every state. Your local state laws may indicate a shorter or longer period in which the judgment remains active. Most states comply with the 7 year period as a fair guidance for collection agencies and credit bureaus. A creditor can go back to court and renew a judgment before it lapses. The renewed judgment would extent the life of the debt for another 7 years.
In the state of Kansas, a civil judgment lasts 7 years. However, a judgment can be extended if it is re-opened in court before the 7 year deadline.
7 years.
7 years
7 Years
The state of residence is not applicable when it relates to credit reports. A judgment will remain on the CR for seven years, but judgments are renewable and therefore if it is renewed it can be reentered on the judgment debtor's CR