After the ten year anniversary passes, contact the CBR and advise them to remove it. IT WILL NOT GO AWAY BY ITSELF! You have to instruct them to remove it after the 10 years is up.
It should be removed from the credit report in 2009. A bankruptcy remains on a credit report for ten years from date of discharge.
Yes, but only after the bankruptcy is removed from your credit report - which can take over ten years from the discharge.
No, it cannot be removed but the information can be amended to read correctly. A bankruptcy discharge remains on a credit report 10 years from the date of discharge.
A bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for the required ten years, it cannot be removed arbitrarily.
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years. Generally a Chapter 13 bankruptcy will be removed after 7 years, but can remain up to 10 years.
It should be removed from the credit report in 2009. A bankruptcy remains on a credit report for ten years from date of discharge.
Yes, but only after the bankruptcy is removed from your credit report - which can take over ten years from the discharge.
No, it cannot be removed but the information can be amended to read correctly. A bankruptcy discharge remains on a credit report 10 years from the date of discharge.
A bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for the required ten years, it cannot be removed arbitrarily.
Bankruptcy can stay on your credit report for up to 10 years. I say "up to" because you can ask to have it removed and in some cases they may do so. After 10 years if it is not removed, you can demand that it be removed.
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years. Generally a Chapter 13 bankruptcy will be removed after 7 years, but can remain up to 10 years.
No.
35 years old
It should rotate off of your credit report about 7 years after being discharged. It cannot be removed.
bankrupcires stay on for 10 yrs. But when you gfinalize the bankruptcy the debts are automatically removed anyways.
Bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for the required ten years. There is no recourse to have the entry removed before the time limit has expired.
A Chapter 7 Bankruptcy may stay on your credit report for up to 10 years. A Chapter 13 Bankruptcy may stay on your credit report for up to 7 years. But both may be removed earlier if the information they are reporting is incorrect, incomplete, misleading, or unverifiable.