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FCRA Lawyer — Fair Credit Reporting Act Attorney
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FCRA Lawyer — Fair Credit Reporting Act Attorney
In short: an FCRA lawyer helps you when a credit bureau, a company that reports information about you (a “furnisher”), or a background- or tenant-screening company puts inaccurate information on your consumer report and won’t fix it. The Fair Credit Reporting Act lets you force a correction and recover money damages — usually with the other side paying your attorney’s fees, so your case costs you nothing up front.
What is the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)?
The FCRA is the federal law that governs how consumer reporting agencies collect, share, and report information about you — your credit reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, but also background-check reports, tenant-screening reports, check and bank-screening reports, and insurance reports. It requires that the information be accurate, that agencies investigate your disputes, and that anything they cannot verify be corrected or deleted. When those rules are broken, the FCRA gives you the right to sue and recover damages. You can read the complete, current text of the statute on the FTC’s website: Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1681 (official FTC PDF, revised March 2026).
Why Congress passed the FCRA — and why it still matters
Congress enacted the Fair Credit Reporting Act in 1970, making it one of the nation’s first major consumer-privacy laws. By then, credit reports had quietly become gatekeepers to American life — deciding who got a mortgage, a job, an apartment, or insurance — while the industry compiling those files operated with almost no accountability for its mistakes. Congress found that inaccurate reports were costing ordinary people homes and livelihoods, and wrote the law’s purpose directly into the statute: consumer reporting agencies must operate “with fairness, impartiality, and a respect for the consumer’s right to privacy,” and must follow “reasonable procedures” to assure “maximum possible accuracy” of the information they sell. 15 U.S.C. § 1681(a); § 1681e(b).
Just as important is how Congress chose to enforce those promises. Lawmakers understood that no ordinary consumer could afford to spend tens of thousands of dollars litigating against billion-dollar credit bureaus over an error in their file — so the FCRA was built to be enforced by consumers themselves, at the industry’s expense. A consumer who proves a violation can recover actual damages, statutory damages for willful violations, and, critically, attorney’s fees and costs paid by the company that broke the law. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681n, 1681o. That fee-shifting design is not a technicality; it is the heart of the statute. It means your lawyer gets paid by the wrongdoer, not by you — which is exactly why we can review your case for free and take it with no fee unless we win. More than fifty years later, credit-reporting errors remain among the most common consumer complaints filed with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the FCRA’s private-enforcement design remains the most effective tool consumers have to force the industry to fix persistent errors.
When do you need an FCRA lawyer?
You may have an FCRA case if any of these sounds familiar:
- A credit report error is costing you loans, rates, or peace of mind — and a dispute didn’t fix it. See our credit reporting errors practice.
- Accounts that aren’t yours appear on your report because of identity theft.
- Someone else’s information is blended into your file — a mixed credit report.
- A background check cost you a job because of inaccurate, outdated, or mismatched records. See employment background check errors.
- A tenant-screening report cost you an apartment for the same reasons. See our tenant screening company guides.
- A debt collector is reporting a debt you don’t owe, already paid, or that is too old. See debt collection harassment and our debt collector guides.
Your core rights under the FCRA
You have the right to know what is in your file, to dispute inaccurate information, to have unverifiable items corrected or deleted, to be told when a report is used against you, to limit who can access your file, to place security freezes and fraud alerts, and to seek damages when a company violates these rights. For the full picture, read our guide to the Top 10 Rights You Have Under the FCRA.
How an FCRA lawyer helps
We handle the dispute strategy, hold the credit bureaus and furnishers accountable when they fail to investigate properly, and pursue statutory and actual damages — plus attorney’s fees, which the FCRA shifts onto the losing company. That fee-shifting is why we take these cases on a no-fee-unless-we-win basis and review them for free.
Frequently asked questions
What does an FCRA lawyer cost?
Usually nothing up front. The FCRA lets prevailing consumers recover attorney’s fees from the company, so we work on a no-fee-unless-we-win basis and the case review is free.
Can I sue a credit bureau for not fixing an error?
Yes. If you disputed an inaccuracy and Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion failed to reasonably investigate or correct it, that can be an FCRA violation entitling you to damages.
How much can I recover in an FCRA case?
Actual damages (financial harm, plus emotional distress), statutory damages of $100–$1,000 for willful violations, and in serious cases punitive damages — plus your attorney’s fees paid by the defendant.
Do I need to dispute the error before suing?
For claims against the credit bureaus and furnishers over inaccurate reporting, a written dispute is usually a required first step — it triggers their legal duty to investigate. We can guide the dispute so it builds the strongest possible case.
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