Credit report disputes

Dispute an Unauthorized Hard Inquiry (Letter Template)

3 min read

Template, not legal advice. Fill in the bracketed fields, dispute only what you believe is inaccurate, confirm the current rule and statute of limitations for your state, and keep a dated copy.

A hard inquiry appears when a lender pulls your credit for an application. If you didn’t apply or authorize it, you can dispute it — an inquiry without a permissible purpose shouldn’t be there. (Hard inquiries you did authorize are accurate and generally can’t be removed; they age off in about two years and affect scores only slightly.)

Before you write

List the inquiries you don’t recognize: the company name and date exactly as shown. Note that some inquiries come from a different brand name than you’d expect (a bank’s lending arm, a dealer’s financing partner) — make sure it’s truly unauthorized before disputing.

The letter

[Your full name]
[Your current address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Date of birth]   [Last 4 of SSN]

[Date]

[Equifax / Experian / TransUnion - address]

Re: Dispute of unauthorized credit inquiry
[Confirmation number, if any]

To whom it may concern:

The following hard inquiry/inquiries appear on my credit report. I did not apply
for credit with, or authorize a credit pull by, these companies, and I am not
aware of any permissible purpose for them:

  1. [Company name as shown] - inquiry dated [date]
  2. [Company name] - inquiry dated [date]

Please investigate whether these inquiries were made with a permissible purpose.
If they were not authorized by me and lack a permissible purpose, please remove
them and send me an updated report. If you have evidence that I authorized any of
them, please provide it.

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
[Your printed name]

How to send it

Send to the bureau (certified, keep a copy). It often helps to also contact the company that pulled your credit and ask them to remove an inquiry they can’t tie to an application by you. A cluster of unauthorized inquiries can be a sign of identity theft — if so, see the identity-theft block and fraud alert / freeze.


Notes. Don’t dispute legitimate inquiries from applications you actually made — that’s frivolous and pointless (they fall off on their own). Rate-shopping for a mortgage/auto/student loan within a short window is usually counted as a single inquiry by scoring models, so those rarely need disputing. General information, not legal advice.

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