55.6 INR
No you cannot remove a repossession off your credit report if your cosigner has a judgement on the repossession.
Steps to Dispute • Get your credit report. • Review your credit report. • Decide which items you want to dispute. • Write letters. • Always hand write your letters in your own handwriting. • Keep copies of all correspondence. • Keep separate file copies on each credit bureau. • Follow up if needed. • Obtain results.
File a motion to vacate based on that fact. After the judgment is entered there is a SOL for filing that motion.
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.
A judgment will reduce you credit score. It takes about 7 years for an item on your credit report to be removed. You have to make a request for it to be remove from your credit after you 7 year period.
After paying the child support, the bureau's creditor will make remove the bad mark from your credit score.
No you cannot remove a repossession off your credit report if your cosigner has a judgement on the repossession.
Contest the judgment through the three major credit reporting bureaus. They will contact the party and either verify that it was paid off and remove it or if they do not hear back with 20 days they will remove it from your credit report.
Steps to Dispute • Get your credit report. • Review your credit report. • Decide which items you want to dispute. • Write letters. • Always hand write your letters in your own handwriting. • Keep copies of all correspondence. • Keep separate file copies on each credit bureau. • Follow up if needed. • Obtain results.
File a motion to vacate based on that fact. After the judgment is entered there is a SOL for filing that motion.
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.
Yes you can. You can dispute it through each credit bureau by showing them proof of the right name.
A judgment stays on your credit report until it is satisfied or proven falls in a court of law. The only way to remove it is to pay it off.
A judgment will reduce you credit score. It takes about 7 years for an item on your credit report to be removed. You have to make a request for it to be remove from your credit after you 7 year period.
The judgment remains as a court record. The credit reporting agencies should report that it has been discharged in bankruptcy. If the bankruptcy remains on your credit report for more than 10 years, you can tell them to remove it.
Demand that the company that made the error correct the problem. They should be able to contact the credit bureaus and take care of the appropriate paperwork. Mail the letters to the three credit agencies along with an explanation of what you want done and why. * The credit bureau(s) will not take any action until the judgment has been removed from the official court records. The debtor will need to contact the clerk or court administrator of the court where the judgment was recorded to obtain the proper procedures necessary for having the judgment lifted. Legal counsel may be needed, depending on the circumstances of the entering and/or execution of the judgment writ in question.
I dont know ask someone who cares