Fair Credit Reporting Act Attorneys
Is your credit report wrong?
An error on your credit report isn't just frustrating — it's a violation of federal law. We hold the credit bureaus and the companies that report to them accountable, and in cases we take, they pay the legal fees, not you.
Credit reporting errors are a federal violation
The Fair Credit Reporting Act gives you the right to an accurate credit report. When a bureau or a furnisher gets it wrong — and doesn't fix it after you dispute it — the law gives you a claim for damages and attorney's fees. That's the only thing we do.
Find the error on your report
If any of these is on your credit report, you may have a case.
Know your rights under the FCRA
Plain-English guides to the federal law behind every credit report. Start here.
Your Rights Under the FCRA
The federal law that governs every credit report — and what it makes the bureaus owe you.
How to Dispute an Error
The dispute is the legal trigger. How to file it so a failed fix becomes a federal claim.
What an FCRA Case Is Worth
Actual damages, statutory damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees — how a recovery is built.
Why a Lawyer Costs You Nothing
The FCRA shifts attorney's fees to the defendant when you win. Here's what that means for you.
Is Your Credit Report Wrong?
Tell us what's on your report. We'll review it at no cost — and in successful cases, the defendant pays the legal fees, not you.
Free review. No obligation. No out-of-pocket cost in cases we take.