How to Remove Charge-Offs from Your Credit Report
A charge-off doesn't mean the debt is forgiven — it means the original creditor wrote it off as a loss. Here's how to address it on your report.
Updated 2026-04-08 · DisputeIQ Editorial
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Start your free analysis →What a charge-off actually is
A charge-off is an accounting action: after roughly 180 days of non-payment, a creditor moves the account from active receivables to a loss on their books. The debt itself still exists and is often sold to a collector — which is why you may see both the original creditor's charge-off and a separate collection tradeline for the same balance.
Why charge-offs hurt so much
Scoring models treat a charge-off as one of the most serious negative events, comparable to a foreclosure or repossession. The damage is amplified when the account continues to update each month with the same charge-off status — each update is treated as a fresh negative event.
The dispute strategy
Look for: continuing balance updates after the charge-off date, mismatched dates of first delinquency, duplicate reporting between original creditor and collector, or any factual inaccuracy. Each of these is grounds for an FCRA §611 dispute and, if needed, a §623(b) letter directly to the original creditor.
Goodwill and negotiation
Some creditors will remove a charge-off as a courtesy after the underlying balance is paid — this is called a 'goodwill deletion.' It's never guaranteed, and never required by law, but it costs nothing to ask in writing.
Frequently asked questions
How long does a charge-off stay on my credit report?
Seven years from the date of first delinquency on the original account.
Does paying a charge-off remove it?
No. It updates the status to 'paid charge-off,' which is still negative. Removal requires a successful dispute or a goodwill agreement.
Can a charge-off be sued on?
Yes, until the statute of limitations on the underlying debt expires — which varies by state and type of debt.
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