Debt collectors

Dispute a Collection Account on Your Report (Letter Template)

3 min · reviewed June 14, 2026

Template, not legal advice. Fill in the [bracketed] fields and dispute only what you genuinely believe is inaccurate. Confirm the current rule, deadline, and statute of limitations for your state, and keep a dated copy of everything you send. For serious cases, talk to a consumer-law attorney.

A collection account on your report is its own tradeline, separate from the original debt. If it’s inaccurate — not yours, wrong balance, already paid, duplicated alongside the original creditor’s entry, or past the reporting period — you can dispute it with the bureaus under the FCRA.

Common collection-reporting errors

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 inaccurate collection account - FCRA Section 611
[Confirmation number, if any]

To whom it may concern:

I am disputing the following collection account as inaccurate and requesting
reinvestigation under the FCRA:

  Collection agency: [name]
  Account number (as shown): [number]
  Original creditor: [name, if shown]
  What is inaccurate:
  [ Choose: "This account is not mine." / "The balance is wrong; correct is $___."
    / "This was paid/settled on [date] - see attached." / "This duplicates the
    original creditor's entry for the same debt." / "The date of first delinquency
    is wrong / re-aged." ]

Please reinvestigate, correct or delete the item if it cannot be verified as
accurate, and send me an updated report.

Enclosed: [proof - payment/settlement letter, etc.]

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
[Your printed name]

How to send it

Send certified mail to each bureau showing it, with proof. A bureau dispute (this letter) is separate from a validation request to the collector — for a collection that’s both on your report and being collected, doing both is reasonable.


Notes. Only dispute genuine inaccuracies. If you actually owe it and it’s accurately reported, a dispute won’t remove it — consider pay-for-delete or settlement instead, and get any deal in writing first. Note medical collections have extra protections (paid ones, those under $500, and those under a year old are no longer reported by the bureaus). General information, not legal advice.

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