Credit Dispute Letter: Complete Template + Legal Guide
A dispute letter is only effective if it cites the right law, identifies the right facts, and lands at the right address.
Updated 2026-04-08 · DisputeIQ Editorial
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DisputeIQ pulls your real credit report, runs an AI analysis, drafts FCRA-compliant dispute letters, and sends them by certified mail with delivery tracking — all in one flow.
Start your free analysis →Anatomy of a working dispute letter
A working FCRA dispute letter has six components: your identifying information, the specific tradeline being disputed, a factual statement of what's wrong, the legal basis (FCRA §611 for bureaus, §623(b) for furnishers), the remedy you're demanding (deletion or correction), and a deadline (30 days from receipt).
Mailing the letter correctly
Always send certified mail with electronic return receipt. The return receipt is your proof of delivery and starts the 30-day investigation clock. Send to the bureau's official dispute address — not their general corporate address.
Common mistakes that kill disputes
Disputing too much in one letter. Using vague language ('this is wrong'). Forgetting to include identifying information. Sending originals of supporting documents. Mailing to the wrong address. Disputing online when you have legal options.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use a template?
Yes, but the facts must be specific to your account. Generic templates that don't reference your actual tradeline are easy for bureaus to flag as frivolous.
Do I need to include evidence?
Helpful but not required. The bureau is obligated to investigate based on your dispute alone.
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