You should send notification to the collection agency you paid in full. They will have the status changed. Carbon Copy the credit bureau.
If the account is legitimately yours, then you cannot legally have it removed from your credit report. However, if you paid the collection account off, it should be reported as paid on your credit report. Still, the accounts will not be removed from your credit report for 7 years.
first dispute the paid items. If they are paid then they should be removed with this step..
If the judgment has been paid, the credit bureaus (such as Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) should reflect this in their credit reports. However, until the legislatively mandated time limits have expired, it will likely not be removed from the report.
The only way to have an account removed from your credit report is: 1. To prove the account was a result of fraud. Or 2. To let the account run the course which is 7 yrs. from the date it was PAID.
You should send notification to the collection agency you paid in full. They will have the status changed. Carbon Copy the credit bureau.
If the account is legitimately yours, then you cannot legally have it removed from your credit report. However, if you paid the collection account off, it should be reported as paid on your credit report. Still, the accounts will not be removed from your credit report for 7 years.
Yes...once it is paid.
No. It will show that you had a judgment on your credit report for up to seven years, but it will show a zero balance.
paid charge off affects your report as it is negative information
first dispute the paid items. If they are paid then they should be removed with this step..
Judgments will stay on your credit report for up to 7 years whether paid or not. You can dispute your judgments to the credit bureaus by sending dispute letters to each of the credit bureaus. The credit bureaus will have to investigate the items and if they are paid they have a greater chance of being removed.
they stay for 6 years. u can ask the courts to mark as settled with prof of payment to the debtor for a small charge of £15
Short Answer: Yes. If you were deliquent, and then paid, it will show that you paid, but were late. And that stays on your credit for seven years. Sometimes you can negotiate with the collection firm to have it removed from your credit in exchange for payment.
If the judgment has been paid, the credit bureaus (such as Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) should reflect this in their credit reports. However, until the legislatively mandated time limits have expired, it will likely not be removed from the report.
The debt will only be removed when it is paid in full. Or when the SOL of the debtors state of residency applies.
7 years