Negotiate removal

Goodwill Letter to Remove a Paid Late Payment

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 goodwill letter asks a creditor to remove an accurate negative mark — usually a late payment on an account you’ve since brought current or paid off — as a courtesy. It is not a legal right and there’s no obligation to say yes, but it genuinely works sometimes, especially with an otherwise solid history and a specific, honest reason for the slip.

When goodwill has a real chance

This is for accurate lates. If the late is wrong, don’t ask for goodwill — dispute it instead.

The letter

[Your full name]
[Your address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Account number]

[Date]

[Creditor name - customer service / executive office]
[Address]

To whom it may concern:

I'm writing to ask for a goodwill adjustment on my account above. I value my
relationship with [creditor] and take responsibility for the late payment(s)
reported in [month/year].

At that time, [brief, honest reason - e.g. "I was hospitalized" / "I lost my job"
/ "a banking error caused my autopay to fail"]. Since then I have [brought the
account current / paid it in full on (date)] and have maintained on-time payments.

Given my overall history, I'm respectfully requesting that you make a goodwill
adjustment by removing the late-payment notation(s) from [month/year] reported to
the credit bureaus. It would genuinely help me as I work to [buy a home / qualify
for X], and I'd be grateful for the consideration.

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
[Your printed name]

How to send it

Be polite and brief — you’re asking a favor. Send it to the creditor (the original lender, not the bureau), and try the executive/customer-relations address if the front line says no. Mailing or the secure-message channel both work; keep a copy. Polite persistence (a second, differently-worded request later) sometimes lands.


Notes. No law requires goodwill removal, so there’s no leverage here — tone matters. Don’t pay a “credit-repair” company for goodwill letters; you can send your own for free. If the negative is inaccurate, use the dispute process, which does have legal force. General information, not legal or financial advice.

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