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Are
you having trouble obtaining a credit card? read how to check you
credit history
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Checking your history Experian and Equifax compile credit histories from a host of different sources, including the electoral roll, county court judgments and how effectively past debts have been paid. You record will be flagged up if you have had an abnormal number of credit checks carried out - everything from buying a freezer on an interest-free deal to opening a new credit card will leave an electronic footprint in your credit history. Experian and Equifax do not turn down your request and neither do they hold a blacklist of individuals and properties.
The decision to refuse credit will be made by the lenders, based on their own criteria. However, if you are refused credit for anything up to £25,000 you should check your credit history to make sure no mistakes have been made. Within 28 days of your last contact about the credit deal, ask the lender for the name and address of the agency which provided the information. You can then write to the agency asking to see all the information about you on their files. To do this you will need to send a £2 fee, give your full name, address and postcode, as well as the details of any other locations you have been living during the last six years. Also, if you are a sole trader or partnership, give your business name and address in case information is held under these details. The agency must reply within seven days. Right of appeal If the decision to refuse you credit was made only by a computerised credit scoring system then you have the right to ask the lender to review the decision. Even if the decision was not taken by a computerised process alone but you consider the decision to refuse you credit was unjustified or wrong, and there is further relevant information which may change the lender's mind, you should ask the lender how to go about having the decision reviewed. Information Commissioner You can ask for your credit history to be changed if it is incorrect or includes details about people with whom you have no financial connection. You should also be able to get notes attached to explain certain periods in your history. However, you can't get information removed just because you might find it embarrassing. Many national newspapers carry adverts for companies proporting to repair your credit rating. However, these firms offer no magic wand and will charge a fee. You do not have to be refused credit to see what information credit reference agencies hold about you. You have the right at any time to ask them in writing for a copy of your file. The Information Commissioner can provide consumer guidance leaflets
with further advice. |
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