How Does Credit Repair Work?
April 9, 2026 | 9 min read
April 9, 2026 | 9 min read
Credit repair is the process of identifying inaccurate, outdated, or unverifiable items on your credit reports and challenging them through formal dispute channels. When those items are corrected or removed, your credit profile may improve — and so may your score. Credit Saint has been helping consumers navigate this process for over 19 years, reviewing credit reports, challenging questionable items, and advocating on behalf of clients with the credit bureaus and creditors.
If you’ve been wondering whether credit repair is real, how it actually works, or whether credit repair companies are legitimate — this guide covers all of it.
| Key Takeaways |
|---|
|
Credit repair refers to the steps taken to address negative or inaccurate items on a credit report. Your credit report is maintained by three major bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — and it contains your full credit history: accounts, payment records, collections, bankruptcies, inquiries, and more.
Errors appear on credit reports more often than most people realize. A creditor may report a payment as late when it was made on time. An account that was paid in full may still show as delinquent. A debt belonging to someone else may appear on your report due to a mixed file or an identity issue. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), the federal law governing what can and cannot appear on your credit report, you have the right to dispute any item you believe is inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable.
Credit repair is the process of exercising that right, either on your own or with the help of a professional service. To learn more about how credit repair companies approach this work, see our guide on understanding credit repair companies.
The short answer: it can — when there are legitimate errors or unverifiable items on your report. Credit repair works by triggering a formal investigation. Once a dispute is filed, the credit bureau is required by law to investigate and respond, typically within 30 days. If the information cannot be verified or is found to be inaccurate, the bureau must correct or remove it.
A 2013 FTC study found that 1 in 5 consumers had at least one error on their credit reports that was corrected after being disputed. That finding points to how meaningful the dispute process can be for consumers who have inaccurate information on their reports.
What credit repair cannot do is remove accurate, verifiable negative information before its legal reporting period expires. A legitimate late payment, a valid collection account, or a confirmed bankruptcy will stay on your report for the timeframes set by law — usually seven years for most negative items, and up to ten years for Chapter 7 bankruptcies. If an item is wrong or unverifiable, the dispute process may help. If it is accurate, time and responsible financial behavior are the most reliable paths forward.
Whether you work with a professional credit repair company or pursue disputes on your own, the process follows a consistent sequence:
We handle every step of this process for our clients, from the initial report review to preparing dispute correspondence to tracking responses across all three bureaus. For a closer look at the dispute process itself, see our article on how to dispute items on your credit report.
Yes, legitimate credit repair companies exist and operate under federal law. The Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA) sets clear rules for how these companies can operate. Under CROA, companies are prohibited from charging upfront fees before services are performed, making false statements about what they can accomplish, and advising clients to misrepresent their credit history.
A legitimate credit repair company will be transparent about the process and honest about what it can realistically achieve. It will not guarantee specific outcomes, promise to remove accurate information, or ask you to pay before any work begins.
Credit Saint has held an A rating with the Better Business Bureau (BBB) since first receiving accreditation in 2007. The company offers a 90-day money-back guarantee: if no negative items are challenged successfully within the first 90 days, clients may request a full refund. For additional guidance on evaluating credit repair options, the FTC’s consumer resource on disputing credit report errors outlines your rights under the FCRA.
Understanding what is disputable helps set realistic expectations before beginning the process.
Items that may be challenged:
Items that cannot be removed through disputes:
We handle every step of the review and challenge process, helping you understand which items on your report may be worth pursuing and which fall outside the scope of what disputes can address.
There is no fixed timeline, and any company that promises results by a specific date is making a claim it cannot reliably support. Each dispute cycle takes up to 30 days for the credit bureau to investigate and respond. When multiple items across multiple bureaus are involved, several rounds of disputes may be needed.
Clients who work with Credit Saint often begin to see changes to their credit reports within the first 45 days, though individual results vary depending on the number of items, the bureaus involved, and how creditors respond. Credit score improvement also depends on factors beyond disputes: payment history, credit utilization, account age, and credit mix all play a role. Dispute outcomes work alongside those factors, not in place of them.
Three federal laws form the foundation of the credit repair process:
These laws define what is and isn’t possible in the credit repair process. A professional credit repair company should be fluent in all three and apply that knowledge when reviewing your reports, identifying disputable items, and preparing formal challenges. To see how credit repair compares to other financial services, our article on credit counseling vs. credit repair breaks down the key differences.
If inaccurate items may be affecting your score, Credit Saint’s team may be able to help. Get a free credit consultation and find out what options may be available to you.
Ready to take the next step? Start with a free credit consultation and find out what Credit Saint’s team may be able to do for your specific credit situation.
Reviewed By:
Ashley Davison
Editor
Ashley is currently the Chief Compliance Officer for Credit Saint, previously the Chief Operating Officer. Ashley got into the Financial world by working as a Logistics Coordinator at Ernst & Young. Coming from a previous career in education, she is eager to teach the world everything she knows and learn everything that she doesn’t! Ashley is a FICO® certified professional, a Board Certified Credit Consultant, a Certified Credit Score Consultant with the Credit Consultants Association of America, UDAAP certified, and holds a Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Compliance Certificate.