Credit report disputes

Request Method of Verification After a 'Verified' Dispute

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.

You disputed an item, and the bureau came back saying it was “verified” — but you know it’s wrong. The FCRA gives you a follow-up: you can ask how they verified it. Under Section 611 (15 U.S.C. §1681i(a)(7)), after a reinvestigation a bureau must, on request, describe its procedure — including the business it contacted and that business’s contact information.

When to use this

The letter

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

[Date]

[Equifax / Experian / TransUnion - address]

Re: Request for method of verification - FCRA Section 611(a)(7)
Prior dispute reference: [number]   Date of result: [date]

To whom it may concern:

On [date] you informed me that the following item was "verified" after my dispute:

  Furnisher / account name: [name]
  Account number (as shown): [number]

I continue to dispute this item as inaccurate. Under FCRA Section 611(a)(7),
please provide a description of the procedure used to determine the accuracy and
completeness of the information, including:

  - the business or furnisher you contacted,
  - that party's name, address, and (if reasonably available) telephone number,
  - and a description of what was actually reviewed to "verify" the item.

If a reasonable reinvestigation was not conducted, or the item cannot be properly
verified, please delete it and send me an updated report.

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
[Your printed name]

How to send it

Send certified mail, keep proof, and reference your prior dispute number. If the bureau can’t show a genuine reinvestigation, that strengthens a re-dispute (attach new evidence) or a complaint.


Notes. If repeated, well-documented disputes keep coming back “verified” on an item you can prove is wrong, that pattern is exactly what the CFPB complaint process (consumerfinance.gov/complaint) and consumer-law attorneys are for. Keep every letter, result, and receipt. General information, not legal advice.

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