No. Pay your bills.
You can write to the credit reporting agency with all the facts and they should be able to remove the items. Be aware though that some things stay on for 10 yrs.
Only the collection agency or the credit bureaus can remove a collection off a credit report. You can negotiate the removal of the collection off the credit report upon final payment of the debt owed. Some collection agencies have policies against this, some don't. You can also redispute it to the credit bureaus as many times as they will let you. It has a higher chance of being removed if it is paid off and an older account.
If they are recent, negotiate with them on how much is owed. Before you send any money, get a letter from them stating what they will agree to. If it is older credit accounts, try an dispute them first and see if they are automatically removed. If they are older than 3 years old, unless a lender is requiring it, I would leave them alone. They will come off your credit in 7 years if they do not report anything else to the credit agencies.
you have to be 13 or older
Around 10 and 11 if not then older
Your suppose to be 12 or 16 or older.
Depending on which of you is in the older generations, the children of your first cousin once removed are either your first cousins twice removed, or your second cousins.Depending on which of you is in the older generation, the children of your second cousin once removed are either your second cousins twice removed, or your third cousins.
Emmett Kelly
Rin is older because she was designed first out of the two and it was originally supposed to be just Rin.
No, Usually credit is extended to an individual 18 years or older.
Yes. You must be 18 or older to obtain any sort of credit, whether it be a credit card or loan. Some companies require their customers to be over 21.
18 years older or 21 years older. It depends what your parents think i reconmand 18years older. That's when your a adult