Wednesday, 04 November 2009

  • FreeCreditReport.com Is Not So Free

    This post comes from our friend J. Nicholson, who blogs about financial issues at Your Financial World and Very Cheap Car Insurance.



    Image Source

    If you have been watching television recently you have no doubt come across run into the merry band of scruffy slackers singing the praises of a site called FreeCreditReport.com. Whether they are driving an old beater or waiting tables in pirate garb, these poor lads would have been so much better off if they had just paid attention to their credit record. Or would they?

    Unfortunately, FreeCreditReport.com turns out to be not so free. The Federal Trade Commission has accused Experian, the company that owns FreeCreditReport.com, of deliberately steering users away from a site where consumers can get a free credit report as required by law, to a service that charges you $14.95 each and every month to alert you to changes in your credit status.

    While the monitoring services like this provide you with real time updates on changes to your credit file, experts say the vast majority of consumers do not need this service. For most people, paying attention to the bills you pay and checking your credit report a few times a year is adequate. 

    By law, each of the three major major credit bureaus – Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian – are required to provide you with one free credit report per year.  The government has set up a website to handle this, but watch the url: it's located at freecreditreport.gov (not ".com"!).

    FreeCreditReport.com is part of the rapidly growing credit monitoring services industry which is now approaching $1 billion in sales. Millions of consumers have signed up for these services, but critics say many had no idea what they were actually signing up for.

    Experian and other companies that provide credit monitoring services are profiting handsomely, but think about whether you really need daily updates about your credit file before signing up for one of these services. A trip to FreeCreditReport.com might not be so free after all.

    Have you ever visited FreeCreditReport.com?  Did you end up signing on to a monitoring service that cost you money you were not expecting?

Comments (11)

  • Choose Identity

  • Give eProps (?)

  • New! You can now edit your comments for 15 minutes after submitting.

About this Entry

Who recommended?