Brand New Dad is a social network and resource center for New Dads and Expectant Fathers, just like you! Brand New Dad is a social network and resource center for New Dads and Expectant Fathers, just like you! Register Now (Free) - and hit the forums, get exclusive special offers, and setup a personal wishlist.

    Forums     Shop     Columns     Month by Month     Money

Username Password
Remember Me
  
Search for
Share

Features
Baby Names
Pregnancy Calendar
Month By Month
Baby Resources
Doula Directory
Money & Finances
Columns & Blogs
Baby Shopping
Free Baby Stuff
Baby Cribs
Baby Shoes
Free Diapers
Jogging Strollers
Potty Training
Sponsored Links

Brand New Dad » Money » Blue Collar Dollar » Free Credit Reports: A Consumer Report Alert

Paul Petillo About the Author
Paul Petillo is the Founder and Editor of BlueCollarDollar.com, and the author of Building Wealth in a Paycheck-to-Paycheck World. The information found there provides you with insightful looks into the mechanisms of finance, the inner workings of your investments, and the outcomes that you are looking for either as a seasoned investor or a novice.
Visit His Website
Buy His Book »
This article is copyright, Paul Petillo (2005)
Once again, the financial industry has turned a simple and elegant idea, a consumer friendly notion that people could really use, and turn it into a fee based and somewhat deceptive product for the unwary.

This month, thirteen western states go live with the offer of free credit reports. The other three quarters of the nation will be added in segments over the next year with the mid-Atlantic states finally being added on September 1, 2006.

With all due respect to the idea of making money, the major players in this sector, Equifax, Experion, and TransUnion could quite possibly have stepped over the line. The previous law allowed you access to a free report if you were denied credit. The new law, the result of the huge wave of refinancing that has taken place over the last few years, allows future borrowers to check - and hopefully repair - their reports before they apply for the loan.

But here is where the new law goes awry:

Experion, through a site titled ConsumerInfo.org does provide the free report - in seconds - but not until you give them your credit card number and unwittingly sign up for monthly alerts for the modest fee of $9.95 a month. You have thirty days to cancel. For $.95 a month, they will monitor any changes in your report.

Equifax offers a slightly different service. They will give you the elusive credit score that lenders use to determine not only creditworthiness but ability to pay and the rate of interest. This subscription based service will cost you $6.95.

TransUnion offers an basket of services surrounding the word free - which is for a free credit score - that can cost as much as $29.95.

The Fair and Accurate Credit Transaction Act was passed by Congress last December not only for borrowers to check their scores but to help protect consumers from the growing problem of identity theft.

And speaking of identity theft, this will, without a doubt open a whole new sector of e-mail fraud offering reports in exchange for sensitive information.

There is only one site that offers this report without costs and without strings.

AnnualCreditReport.com
P.O.Box 105281
Atlanta, Georgia 30348-5281
1-877-322-8228

Rest assured, consumer advocates have approved this site. It offers three reports at once should you be making a major purchase from the major sites or you can receive them at various times throughout the year if you are monitoring identity theft. Either way, the information you provide is not sold.

Latest Blue Collar Dollar Columns

» Do You Need a Financial Planner?
» Property Values and Replacement Costs: Have you updated your Insurance lately?
» The Money Mindset: How to be a Big Business Thinker on a Small Business Budget
» Kids and Money
» Disaster Planning - Making a Plan You May Never Use
» Understanding Your Investments After You are Gone
» Free Credit Reports: A Consumer Report Alert
» A Look at Your Credit
» Partnerships: A Look at Women and Finance
» Do You IRA? A Look at the Program Thirty Years Later
» Where there is a Will there is a Way


Brand New Dad provides general information and is designed for educational purposes only.
If you have any concerns about your own health or the health of your child, you should always consult with a physician or other healthcare professional.
Please review the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy before using this site. Your use of the site indicates your agreement to be bound by the Terms of Service.

Copyright © 2003-2012 Brand New Dad