Can a debtor send my account to a “credit bureau” without notifying me first?

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Can a debtor send my account to a “credit bureau” without notifying me first?

Asked on August 11, 2011 Virginia

Answers:

FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney

Answered 13 years ago | Contributor

I believe you mean, can a "creditor" send your unpaid account to a credit reporting agency without notifying your first? A "debtor" is one who owes an obligation to someone. A "creditor" is one who is owed an obligation.

A "creditor" can send an unpaid and overdue account information owed by a "debtor" to a credit reporting agency without first notifying the "debtor." Such reporting is typical within the debt collection agency business and is part of its custom and practice.

If you owe an obligation that has been reported to a credit reporting agency, the end result is that you have a negative mark on your credit report. If you can pay off the obligation in  monthly installments on an owed debt, that would be a good way on cleaning up your credit report assuming you cannot pay the obligation in full.


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