Call your credit card company and inquire. If you can not get through, cancel the card.
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.
Bankruptcy. Bankruptcy will not remove a judgment from the debtor's credit report. The judgment will still remain for the required time if it is discharged in bankruptcy, settled or paid in full. Valid judgments remain for the required 7 years. Most judgments are renewable and can be reentered on the debtor's credit report whenever that action is taken.
The foreclosure will be on your credit report indefinitely.
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.
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.
Bankruptcy. Bankruptcy will not remove a judgment from the debtor's credit report. The judgment will still remain for the required time if it is discharged in bankruptcy, settled or paid in full. Valid judgments remain for the required 7 years. Most judgments are renewable and can be reentered on the debtor's credit report whenever that action is taken.
Anytime a bankruptcy shows up on a credit report, the credit score associated with such a credit report will be ranked as fair or poor. Four years is still considered "recent" concerning bankruptcy, so poor is the best that one can hope for. Bankruptcies stay on the credit report for ten (10) years.
It sticks for 7 years. The fact that it was turned over to a collections agency will make it to your credit report. When it is paid in full, it will say "settled" on your credit report so other creditors know you took care of the debt. Even so, it still haunts your credit report for 7 years.
The foreclosure will be on your credit report indefinitely.
A repo will stay on your credit report until the remaining balance is paid off or settled, you still owe the amount left on the vehicle even though the car is not in your possession.
A satisfied judgment can typically stay on your credit report for seven years from the date it was filed. Even after it is satisfied, it may still appear on your credit report for the full seven-year period, but with a notation stating that it has been paid.
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 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.