The dispute letter is the central tool in the credit repair process. Under Section 611 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. § 1681i), you have the legal right to dispute any information on your credit report that you believe is inaccurate or incomplete. When you notify a credit bureau of a dispute in writing, the bureau must conduct a reasonable investigation within 30 days and delete or correct any item that is inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable.
But not all dispute letters are equally effective. A vague, emotional, or poorly organized letter may be dismissed as frivolous — which the FCRA permits under Section 611(a)(3). A clear, specific, well-documented letter significantly increases your chances of a successful outcome.
This guide provides everything you need to write effective dispute letters: what to include, what to leave out, templates for common scenarios, mailing addresses for all three bureaus, and certified mail instructions.
Why the Quality of Your Dispute Letter Matters
When a credit bureau receives your dispute, it initiates a process called a "reinvestigation." The bureau translates your dispute into a coded form and sends it electronically to the furnisher (the company that reported the data). The furnisher then reviews the claim and reports back.
If your dispute letter is vague — for example, "I don't think this is right" without specifying what is wrong — the bureau has less to work with. The investigation may be cursory, and the furnisher may simply confirm the existing information. However, if your letter clearly identifies the specific error, explains why it is wrong, and provides supporting evidence, the furnisher is forced to actually review the claim against their records.
Additionally, the FCRA allows bureaus to reject disputes they deem "frivolous or irrelevant" under Section 611(a)(3). If your letter looks like a mass-produced template with no specific information about your situation, it is more likely to be flagged. Personalized, factual letters that reference specific account details are taken more seriously.
The maximum time a credit bureau has to investigate your written dispute under FCRA Section 611
Source: 15 U.S.C. § 1681i(a)(1)(A)
What to Include in Every Dispute Letter
Every effective dispute letter should contain these elements.
Essential Elements of a Dispute Letter
- Your full legal name as it appears on your credit report
- Your current mailing address (and previous address if you have moved recently)
- Your Social Security number (you may use the last 4 digits for security)
- Your date of birth
- The date you are writing the letter
- The specific account name and account number for each disputed item
- A clear explanation of what is inaccurate about each item
- What the correct information should be
- A request that the item be corrected or deleted per FCRA Section 611
- A list of enclosed supporting documents (copies only — never originals)
- A copy of your government-issued photo ID
- A copy of a utility bill or bank statement showing your current address
- Your signature
What NOT to Include
Just as important as what goes in your letter is what should be left out. These are common mistakes that can weaken your dispute or get it flagged as frivolous.
What to Leave OUT of Your Dispute Letter
- Legal threats or aggressive language — stay calm and factual
- Lengthy personal stories or emotional appeals — bureaus respond to facts, not feelings
- Demands to "prove this debt" — that is debt validation under the FDCPA, not a bureau dispute
- References to "Section 609 requires you to delete this" — Section 609 is a disclosure right, not a deletion mechanism
- Disputing every single item on your report at once — this can look frivolous
- Generic template language copied verbatim from the internet — personalize every letter
- Original documents — only send copies; keep originals safe
- Requests for the bureau to "validate the debt" — that applies to collectors under the FDCPA, not bureaus
Credit Bureau Dispute Mailing Addresses
Each credit bureau has a dedicated mailing address for written disputes. Send your dispute letter via certified mail with return receipt requested to the correct address.
Credit Bureau Dispute Mailing Addresses
| Credit Bureau | Dispute Mailing Address | Online Portal |
|---|---|---|
| Equifax | P.O. Box 740256, Atlanta, GA 30374 | equifax.com/personal/disputes/ |
| Experian | P.O. Box 4500, Allen, TX 75013 | experian.com/disputes/ |
| TransUnion | P.O. Box 2000, Chester, PA 19016 | transunion.com/credit-disputes/ |
Always verify the current mailing address on the bureau's official website before sending. Addresses can change, and using an outdated address will delay your dispute.
General Dispute Letter Template
Below are templates you can customize for three common dispute scenarios. Replace all bracketed information with your actual details. Remember to keep the letter professional, factual, and specific.
Template: Incorrect Account Balance
[Your Full Name]
[Your Address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Date]
[Bureau Name]
[Bureau Dispute Address]
[City, State ZIP]
Re: Dispute of Inaccurate Information — Request for Investigation Under FCRA Section 611
Dear [Bureau Name] Dispute Department,
I am writing to dispute inaccurate information on my credit report. I have reviewed my report and identified the following error:
Disputed Item:
Creditor Name: [Name of creditor]
Account Number: [XXXX-last 4 digits]
Reported Balance: [Amount shown on report]
Actual Balance: [Correct amount]
This account balance is inaccurate. [Brief, factual explanation — e.g., "I made a payment of $X on [date], which reduced the balance to $X. Enclosed is a copy of my payment confirmation/bank statement showing this transaction."]
Under Section 611 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. § 1681i), I request that you investigate this item and correct the reported balance to reflect the accurate amount of [correct balance].
Enclosed:
1. Copy of government-issued photo ID
2. Copy of utility bill showing current address
3. [List each supporting document]
Please send me written notification of the results of your investigation as required by the FCRA.
Sincerely,
[Your Signature]
[Your Printed Name]
SSN: XXX-XX-[last 4]
DOB: [Date of Birth]
Template: Account That Is Not Yours
[Your Full Name]
[Your Address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Date]
[Bureau Name]
[Bureau Dispute Address]
Re: Dispute of Account Not Belonging to Me
Dear [Bureau Name] Dispute Department,
I am writing to dispute an account appearing on my credit report that does not belong to me.
Disputed Item:
Creditor/Collection Agency: [Name]
Account Number: [Number as shown on report]
Reported Balance: [Amount]
I have no knowledge of this account and have never entered into a credit agreement with this company. This account may be the result of a mixed credit file or identity theft.
Under Section 611 of the FCRA (15 U.S.C. § 1681i), I request that you investigate this item. If the furnisher cannot verify that this account belongs to me, I request that it be removed from my credit report immediately.
Enclosed:
1. Copy of government-issued photo ID
2. Copy of utility bill showing current address
3. [If applicable: FTC Identity Theft Report]
Please send me written notification of the results of your investigation.
Sincerely,
[Your Signature]
[Your Printed Name]
SSN: XXX-XX-[last 4]
DOB: [Date of Birth]
Template: Incorrect Late Payment
[Your Full Name]
[Your Address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Date]
[Bureau Name]
[Bureau Dispute Address]
Re: Dispute of Incorrectly Reported Late Payment
Dear [Bureau Name] Dispute Department,
I am writing to dispute a late payment entry that is inaccurately reported on my credit report.
Disputed Item:
Creditor: [Name]
Account Number: [XXXX-last 4]
Reported Late Payment: [Month/Year] — reported as [30/60/90] days late
Actual Status: Payment was made on time on [date]
My payment for [month/year] was made on [date], which was before the due date of [due date]. Enclosed is my bank statement showing the payment was processed on [date], confirming it was received on time.
Under Section 611 of the FCRA (15 U.S.C. § 1681i), I request that you investigate this item and correct the payment history for [month/year] to reflect an on-time payment.
Enclosed:
1. Copy of government-issued photo ID
2. Copy of bank statement showing payment date
3. [Any additional supporting documents]
Please send written notification of the results.
Sincerely,
[Your Signature]
[Your Printed Name]
SSN: XXX-XX-[last 4]
DOB: [Date of Birth]
For additional strategies on removing late payments, including goodwill letters when the late payment was accurate, see our guide on how to remove late payments from your credit report.
Need Help Writing Your Dispute Letters?
Our credit analysis team can identify disputable items on your report and help you craft effective dispute letters. Free, no obligation.
Get Your Free Credit AnalysisHow to Send Your Dispute Letter
How you send your dispute letter matters almost as much as what is in it. Sending via certified mail with return receipt creates an undeniable legal record that the bureau received your dispute — and starts the 30-day investigation clock.
Certified Mail Step by Step
Sending Your Dispute via Certified Mail
Print Your Dispute Letter
Print the finalized letter. Keep a copy for your records before you mail anything.
Make Copies of All Supporting Documents
Copy your ID, proof of address, and all evidence documents. Never send originals — keep those in a secure file.
Go to Your Local Post Office
Request USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt Requested (PS Form 3811). You will need a green receipt card.
Fill Out the Certified Mail Forms
Write the bureau dispute address on the green card. The postal clerk will attach tracking and provide your receipt.
Pay and Send
Certified mail with return receipt typically costs $4 to $7 on top of regular postage. Worth every penny for the legal protection it provides.
Save Your Receipt and Tracking Number
File your certified mail receipt and tracking number with your copy of the dispute letter. You can track delivery at usps.com. The 30-day investigation clock starts when the bureau receives your letter.
What to Do After Sending Your Letter
After mailing your dispute, follow these steps to stay organized and prepared for the response.
- Track delivery: Use your certified mail tracking number at usps.com to confirm when the bureau received your letter. Note this date — the bureau has 30 days from receipt to complete their investigation.
- Create a dispute file: Keep your letter copy, certified mail receipt, tracking confirmation, and all evidence documents together. If you disputed with multiple bureaus, organize by bureau.
- Set a calendar reminder: Mark day 30 and day 35 on your calendar. The bureau must complete the investigation within 30 days and notify you within 5 business days after completion.
- Do not send additional disputes on the same items while the current investigation is pending. Wait for the results before deciding on next steps.
- Review the response carefully when it arrives. If the error was corrected, verify the change on your updated credit report. If the dispute was denied, you have options — see our guide to the full dispute process for escalation strategies.
Common Dispute Letter Mistakes to Avoid
Based on common patterns that reduce dispute success rates, here are the mistakes to avoid.
Key Takeaways
- Effective dispute letters are specific, factual, and personalized — not generic templates copied from the internet.
- Include your identifying information, the specific account and error, the correct information, and copies of supporting evidence.
- Send disputes via USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt to create a legal paper trail and start the 30-day investigation clock.
- Dispute 3 to 5 items per round to avoid your disputes being flagged as frivolous under Section 611(a)(3).
- Never send original documents. Keep originals, letter copies, and mail receipts organized in a dispute file.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I dispute by mail or online?
Can I use the same dispute letter for all three bureaus?
Should I include original documents with my dispute letter?
How long should my dispute letter be?
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