Title 15 › Chapter 41— CONSUMER CREDIT PROTECTION › Subchapter III— CREDIT REPORTING AGENCIES › § 1681m
If someone takes an adverse action against you that is based in whole or part on a consumer report — for example denying credit, raising costs, or giving worse terms — they must tell you. They must give notice by phone, mail, or electronic means. They must also give you a written or electronic disclosure that shows the numerical credit score they used and the other basic information from the report. The notice must name the consumer reporting agency that supplied the report, give its contact information (including a toll-free number if it is nationwide), and say that the agency did not make the decision and cannot explain the specific reasons. You must be told that you can get a free copy of your consumer report within 60 days and that you can dispute any incorrect or incomplete information with the agency. If the action was based on information from someone other than a consumer reporting agency, the user must tell you that you can ask in writing for the nature of that information. You must get the disclosure if you request it within 60 days of learning about the adverse action. If the information came from a related company, the user must disclose the information within 30 days after getting your written request. A person is not liable for a violation if they can show they had reasonable procedures to follow the rules. For unsolicited credit or insurance offers made because a consumer report was used, the written offer must say that a report was used, explain why the consumer was selected, tell the consumer they can opt out of prescreened offers (and list the notification system’s address and toll-free number), and keep the selection criteria on file for 3 years. Federal agencies must set identity-theft guidelines for banks and creditors, including special protections when an address change is followed quickly by a request for a new card (at least the first 30 days) and guidance for inactive accounts older than 2 years. Debts identified as resulting from identity theft cannot be sold, transferred for payment, or placed for collection after the notice, subject only to limited exceptions like repurchase, securitization, or transfers in mergers. If a debt collector is told a debt may be fraudulent or from identity theft, the collector must tell the creditor and must give the consumer, on request, the information the consumer would be entitled to when disputing the debt. Finally, if you are offered credit on terms that are materially less favorable than the most favorable terms a lender offers to many consumers because of a consumer report, the lender must give you a notice that explains the use of the report, names the reporting agency, tells you how to get a free copy of the report, and shows the score and basic report information; the Bureau will make rules about how and when these notices must be given. Enforcement of these rules is done by federal agencies, and reasonable procedures provide a defense against liability.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 1681m
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60