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Updated by jcburgher on Feb 22, 2018
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A Guide to Credit Monitoring

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A Guide To Credit Monitoring

A Guide To Credit Monitoring

Credit Reports are typically generated by talking to one of three major companies and setting up an account that will relay all the information regarding your credit report.

With the three separate credit companies, you as a consumer can get three unique credit reports. These reports will have similar information, but one or the other may contain bits and pieces that are not available publicly on your other reports. To maximize your credit report rate, a yearly check with all three companies is ideal.

To elaborate, a credit report is made up of various parts. One part is the consumer information, which includes your name, date of birth, address, and employer. Another part is the history of your accounts, dating back as far as the first time you have opened a bank account, to when you may have taken out loans or applied for loans.

Another part of credit reports that is often overlooked is the creditor information. The creditor information on a credit report from one of the three major companies will let you know the information needed to get a hold of and speak with a licensed creditor, or in some cases, the creditor already handling your accounts and loans.

The main idea behind a credit report is to let you know how you have handled your past loans, current loans, or any financial debt you may have. A credit report also has the bonus of being able to show you if someone has stolen your identity and made loans under your name or similar crimes.

Regarding lenders and how they use credit reports, there are several bits of information that a lender can extract from a credit report. Some of this information, like your past loan repayments, will let the lender know If you as a borrower are responsible and pay your loans back on time. Some of the information on the credit report will also let the lender know whether or not you have a good track record with managing your finances, such as not being bankruptcy.

If you as a previous borrower have an interest in seeing that your credit is secure, then a credit monitoring service might be the right choice for you. Some of the perks of having a credit monitoring service, like the 3 in 1 report offered by many online services, include being able to check your credit score with all three companies on a whim and being assured and kept up to date with any changes to your credit score almost within a week.

A major reason to monitor your credit is to use it to combat identity theft. Identity theft means someone is using your information to apply for loans under your name or other methods of adding debt to an account other than their own. Rest assured that if any sudden charges or loans get added to your credit report, you will be made aware of them promptly and be able to deal with them right then and there.

An interesting method of checking your credit report would be monitoring it by requesting all three major credit reporting companies. Sounds familiar, right? Well, with this method, instead of requesting all three reports at the same time, you as a consumer would spread out your requests over the course of a year. This means that every four months, you would request a report. A bonus of this method is that you can avoid a credit monitoring service.

Although it does provide a good methodology of tracking your bankruptcy case studies and reports, a credit monitoring service will be more than likely not provide you with tips and tricks on how to prevent identity theft other than alerts. One bit of common sense to hang onto is that of closing any unused accounts with banks or lenders that you have open, which you have viewed on your credit report. Closing these ahead of time when they are not being used can lower your risk of identity theft.