How to Read Your Credit Report
By Carlos Acosta | Fact checked
Last Updated: February 2026
Get Your Free Credit Report
Federal law entitles you to one free copy of your credit report from each of the three major bureaus every 12 months. Checking your report helps you spot errors and understand what lenders see.
- Request reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion
- No credit card required
- Review for errors before applying for new credit
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If this sounds like you…
You've been denied recently, want to avoid hard pulls, or are starting with no credit — secured cards are usually the safest next step.
Personal Info
Your name, address, date of birth, and SSN (often partially masked). Check for errors or signs of identity theft.
Account History
Each credit account with balance, limit, payment status, and age. Look for late payments, high utilization, or accounts you do not recognize.
Public Records
Bankruptcies, tax liens, or civil judgments. These can stay for 7–10 years and have a large impact.
Inquiries
Hard inquiries (when you applied for credit) and sometimes soft inquiries. Hard inquiries stay for about 2 years.
Check Your Credit Report for These Common Errors
Before applying for new credit, review your report for mistakes that can lower approval odds.
- Accounts that do not belong to you
- Late payments reported incorrectly
- Paid collections still marked as unpaid
- Duplicate accounts
- Incorrect balances or credit limits
- Negative items older than the legal reporting period
- Hard inquiries you did not authorize
If you find any of these errors, dispute them before applying for new credit.
Before You Apply
- Check your credit report for errors
- Know your current score
- Compare fees and deposit requirements before applying
What rebuilding typically looks like
- Month 0Open your first credit-building account
- Months 1–3On-time payments begin reporting
- Months 4–6Early score improvement appears
- Months 9–12Eligible for better card options
Common mistakes to avoid
- Applying for multiple cards at once
- Carrying balances on secured cards
- Closing your first account too early
What Rebuilding Credit Usually Looks Like
Credit improvement is not instant. Most people see progress in predictable stages.
- Month 0–1
- Account approved and opened
- Initial deposit or setup completed
- Credit line reports to bureaus
- Month 2–3
- First on-time payments reported
- Credit utilization stabilizes
- Early score movement possible
- Month 4–6
- Consistent payment history builds
- Approval odds for better cards improve
- Fewer rejections when applying
- Month 6–12
- Graduation or upgrade options appear
- Lower fees and higher limits possible
- Stronger overall credit profile
Results vary based on payment history, balances, and past credit issues.