I monitor my credit reports at all three bureaus pretty closely. Lately because the Barclay's and Discover credit cards reveal my Trans-Union FICO score to me, and my Union Bank credit card reveals my Experian FICO score to me, I monitor those closely too.
As a background to all this, understand that there are three major credit bureaus in the United States. There are equivalent bureaus in foreign countries too, although the credit monitoring / profile system is much more entrenched and thorough in the U.S.
In the U.S. we have Experian (formerly TRW), Trans-Union and Equifax (formerly CBI-Equifax). In principle, these All Seeing bureaus gather and record all creditor/ debtor transactions that happen in the U.S., and maintain a "credit report" or "credit profile" on each of us. These reports include both records of credit granting situations - such as credit cards, loans, etc., and also certain types of public records, such as civil court cases that have gone to judgment (situations where people are sued and a final judgment of the court ordering them to pay a certain amount to a creditor is entered by the court and then recorded with a government entity such as the county recorder).
These credit bureaus also maintain personal identifying information about us, our names, addresses, social security numbers (and in foreign countries, other personal identifying numbers), dates of birth, phone numbers, and limited employment records (usually limited to just the names of current and past employers).
What many do not know, is that these bureaus are sometimes not as all-seeing as we fear (or hope), and many things slip through the cracks. As well, the information recorded on one bureau may not be on another.
Now, naturally when it comes to GOOD credit we want it all to show up on our reports, and show up CORRECTLY, identifying the full amounts we owed and paid back. And when it comes to bad credit, especially judgments, we hope that the bureaus will somehow have MISSED these pieces of derogatory information and NOT recorded them.
For the most part though, these credit bureaus are pretty good at what they do and record the good the bad and the ugly of our credit lives, fairly accurately.
As a background to all this, understand that there are three major credit bureaus in the United States. There are equivalent bureaus in foreign countries too, although the credit monitoring / profile system is much more entrenched and thorough in the U.S.
In the U.S. we have Experian (formerly TRW), Trans-Union and Equifax (formerly CBI-Equifax). In principle, these All Seeing bureaus gather and record all creditor/ debtor transactions that happen in the U.S., and maintain a "credit report" or "credit profile" on each of us. These reports include both records of credit granting situations - such as credit cards, loans, etc., and also certain types of public records, such as civil court cases that have gone to judgment (situations where people are sued and a final judgment of the court ordering them to pay a certain amount to a creditor is entered by the court and then recorded with a government entity such as the county recorder).
These credit bureaus also maintain personal identifying information about us, our names, addresses, social security numbers (and in foreign countries, other personal identifying numbers), dates of birth, phone numbers, and limited employment records (usually limited to just the names of current and past employers).
What many do not know, is that these bureaus are sometimes not as all-seeing as we fear (or hope), and many things slip through the cracks. As well, the information recorded on one bureau may not be on another.
Now, naturally when it comes to GOOD credit we want it all to show up on our reports, and show up CORRECTLY, identifying the full amounts we owed and paid back. And when it comes to bad credit, especially judgments, we hope that the bureaus will somehow have MISSED these pieces of derogatory information and NOT recorded them.
For the most part though, these credit bureaus are pretty good at what they do and record the good the bad and the ugly of our credit lives, fairly accurately.
Comment