TCPA class action against the Los Angeles Times. Final approval granted 2014.

You pull your credit report and find an account that isn’t yours. Or a debt you paid off three years ago still shows as delinquent. You file a dispute, wait 30 days, and get back a letter saying the bureau “verified” the information as accurate. Nothing changes. The error stays. Your score stays damaged.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1681–1681x) gives you a private right of action in federal court against any credit bureau that fails to fix a verified error after a proper dispute. This guide covers every step: what creates legal standing, how to build your evidence file, what damages are actually available, and the deadlines that can end your case before it begins. The Law Offices of Todd M. Friedman, P.C. offers free consultations for FCRA cases and can assess your position without any upfront cost.
The FCRA gives credit reporting agencies two core obligations: maintain reasonable procedures to ensure accuracy, and investigate consumer disputes within 30 days of receiving them. For regulatory context, see the CFPB’s rule on accuracy and dispute procedures (12 CFR 1022.43).
The FCRA creates two violation tracks, and the one that applies to your situation controls what damages you can collect. A negligent violation occurs when the bureau made an honest mistake but failed to correct it after your dispute. A willful violation occurs when the bureau knew the information was wrong or acted with reckless disregard for accuracy.
Negligent violations (15 U.S.C. § 1681o) allow you to recover actual damages and attorney’s fees. Willful violations (15 U.S.C. § 1681n) open the door to statutory damages of $100 to $1,000 per violation — available in place of actual damages — plus punitive awards on top. For a plain-language overview, see Everything Need to Know About the FCRA | Fair Credit Reports.
Not every error that persists after a dispute creates a winnable federal lawsuit. The bureau must have failed to conduct a “reasonable investigation” — which means more than forwarding the dispute to the furnisher and accepting whatever response comes back. Courts have found actionable failures when a bureau rubber-stamped the furnisher’s response without reviewing source documents, or when a deleted item was reinstated without proper written notice to the consumer.
A useful mental test: did the bureau have real evidence supporting the accuracy of the item, or did it simply accept the furnisher’s word at face value?
Before any FCRA lawsuit is viable, you need a clear record of having disputed the error properly. That means written disputes sent by certified mail with return receipt. Online dispute portals are convenient, but certified mail creates the paper trail a court can actually follow. You can also file disputes or request reports through AnnualCreditReport.com.
Your dispute letter must include:
Send the letter to each bureau’s certified dispute mailing address:
Keep every certified mail receipt and delivery confirmation. Those documents become evidence in any subsequent lawsuit.
The furnisher — the bank, lender, or debt collector that reported the wrong information — has its own separate obligation under the FCRA to investigate disputes. Filing a dispute only with the bureau may not create the full set of legal obligations that support a lawsuit. Send the same letter with the same documentation to the furnisher at the same time. This creates an independent legal obligation on their end and closes a common defense argument that they were never properly notified of the error. California-focused tips are available in How Can California Consumers Identify and Successfully Dispute Erroneous Negative Marks on Their Credit Reports?
After receiving a written dispute, the bureau has 30 days to investigate — extended to 45 days if you submit additional documentation during the investigation. The bureau must notify you of the results in writing within five business days of completing its review. If the bureau fails to respond within the deadline, closes the investigation without meaningful review, or simply re-verifies the error without examining source documents, that inaction can itself support a lawsuit. Keep dated records of when you sent the dispute and when — or whether — you received a response.
Litigation prep starts the day you discover the error, not the day you hire a lawyer. The documents you collect now determine whether you can prove both the violation and the harm it caused.
Start with dated screenshots or printouts of your credit report from all three bureaus, showing the error exactly as it appears. Add your certified mail receipts and delivery confirmations from every dispute you’ve sent, plus the bureau’s investigation result letters and any updated reports showing whether the item changed. Then layer in your proof of harm: loan denial letters, mortgage or rental application rejections, financing terms that were worse because of the error, and any correspondence about higher insurance premiums.
Financial harm with documentation is the foundation of an actual damages claim. Emotional distress is also compensable under the FCRA without a specific cap. For practical tips on organizing your claim, see Everything Need to Know About the FCRA | Fair Credit Reports.
A timeline turns a stack of documents into a story a judge or jury can follow. Record the date you first discovered the error, the date each dispute was sent, the date each response was received, and whether the error continued appearing after each investigation closed. Every phone call to a bureau should be documented with the representative’s name, then followed up in writing so there’s a paper record. Courts and opposing counsel rely on documentary evidence — credit reports, certified mail receipts, written confirmations — rather than memory, and inconsistencies in dates are the first thing opposing counsel will look for.
The FCRA’s damages structure is more favorable to consumers than most people expect. The fee-shifting provision — which requires the losing bureau to pay your attorney’s fees under 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681n and 1681o — makes it practical to retain experienced counsel even when your individual financial damages are modest.
For a negligent violation, you can recover actual damages and attorney’s fees, but statutory and punitive damages are off the table — you need documented financial harm. For a willful violation, you can recover actual damages or statutory damages of $100 to $1,000 per violation (whichever you elect), punitive damages at the court’s discretion, and attorney’s fees. In willful cases, you don’t need to prove specific financial loss because statutory damages provide a floor regardless of documented harm.
Actual damages cover every measurable loss tied to the inaccuracy: higher interest rates on loans, missed job opportunities, denied rental applications, and emotional distress. Emotional distress carries no cap under the FCRA and is regularly recognized by courts as legitimate compensable harm. Punitive damages, available only for willful violations, can reach six figures in egregious cases where the bureau’s conduct warrants a strong deterrent. Consumer advocates and reform groups continue pushing for stronger oversight — see Consumer Rights Advocates Demand Credit Reporting Reform.
The FCRA imposes a federal statute of limitations that applies uniformly across all 50 states. Missing it ends the case before it starts, regardless of how strong the underlying violation is.
Under 15 U.S.C. § 1681p, you must file suit within two years from the date you discovered — or reasonably should have discovered — the FCRA violation. A separate hard outer limit applies: five years from the date the violation occurred, regardless of when you found out. Whichever expires first controls. Both are federal limits and neither bends based on state law.
Some federal courts have applied the “continuing violation” doctrine to FCRA cases, treating each new transmission of inaccurate information as a separate violation with its own two-year window. Courts are not uniform on this doctrine — its application depends on the specific facts and jurisdiction. A consumer protection attorney can answer this directly during a free consultation before you assume the window has closed.
Some credit report errors resolve through the dispute process. Many don’t. Once the bureau has investigated and left the error standing — or reinstated a deleted item without proper notice — the dispute process has run its course and litigation may be the only remaining remedy.
The clearest indicators that you need an attorney: the bureau investigated your dispute and the error is still on your report; a previously deleted item was reinserted without proper written notice; the bureau missed the 30-day response deadline entirely; the error caused a concrete, documented harm such as a denied mortgage, a higher loan rate, or a rejected rental application.
The Law Offices of Todd M. Friedman, P.C. — with 11 consecutive Super Lawyers designations (2016–2026), an AV Preeminent rating from Martindale-Hubbell, and an A+ BBB rating — has represented consumers against credit bureaus and furnishers in FCRA lawsuits across California, Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Because the FCRA is a fee-shifting statute, the firm can often take qualifying cases without requiring clients to pay out of pocket. If you win, the bureau pays attorney’s fees.
Contact the Law Offices of Todd M. Friedman, P.C. at 323-690-1688 for a free consultation. That one step costs you nothing and can tell you whether your case is worth pursuing. Assuming the window has closed or the claim isn’t worth it — without asking — is the most common mistake consumers make.
Yes. The FCRA requires you to exhaust the dispute process before you can file suit against a credit reporting agency. A court will expect documented proof that you submitted a written dispute and received a response, or that the bureau failed to respond at all.
Under 15 U.S.C. § 1681p, you have two years from the date you discovered the violation, or five years from the date the violation occurred — whichever deadline expires first. Do not wait.
Potentially still worth filing. For willful violations, the FCRA provides statutory damages of $100 to $1,000 per violation without requiring proof of specific financial loss. The fee-shifting provision also means the bureau pays your attorney’s fees if you prevail, making it economically viable to pursue claims that would otherwise be cost-prohibitive.
Yes. The furnisher — the bank, lender, or debt collector that reported the inaccurate data — has independent obligations under the FCRA. If you disputed directly with the furnisher and they failed to investigate or correct the error, you may have a separate claim against them in addition to your claim against the credit bureau.
Many FCRA attorneys, including the Law Offices of Todd M. Friedman, P.C., handle these cases on a fee-shifting basis — the firm’s fees are paid by the bureau if you win. A free initial consultation lets you understand your options before committing to anything.
Related Pages:
FCRA Attorney | Credit Report Errors | How to File an FCRA Violation Lawsuit | The FCRA Explained | Credit Reporting Reform | Disputing Negative Marks (California)