15 U.S.C. § 1666b, part of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), mandates that credit card issuers provide at least 21 days between mailing a statement and the payment due date to avoid late fees or interest charges. It prohibits treating payments as late if received by 5 PM on the due date and prevents unfair late charges due to delayed statement mailing.
15 USC 1666b: Length of billing period in credit statement for imposition of finance charge; effect of failure of timely mailing or delivery of statement.
After 30 days, you can only remove late payments that are incorrect. It's a good idea to check your credit scores and reports often. If you believe any information in one of your credit reports is incorrect, you can file a dispute. Contact both the creditor and the relevant consumer reporting agency.
What is AB 673 and what does it do? AB 673 is a bill the Governor signed into law in 2019 which amended Labor Code section 210 to allow an employee to recover statutory penalties for late payment of wages while still employed.
Missing a payment by 30 days
If you haven't made your payment within 30 days of the due date, this is typically when issuers will report a late payment to the credit bureaus.
It's partly true: most negative items like late payments and collections are removed from your credit report after about seven years, but the underlying debt often still exists, and bankruptcies (Chapter 7) last 10 years, so your credit isn't entirely "clear" but mostly refreshed from old negatives. The 7-year clock starts from the date of the original delinquency, not when you paid it off or sent to collections, and the debt itself can still be pursued by collectors.
If you're delivering services on time to your clients, it can be frustrating to be met with excuses for late payment, which typically fall into one of four categories: systems error, supply chain, company crisis or dispute.
The "777 rule" in debt collection, also known as the 7-in-7 rule, is a CFPB regulation (Regulation F) limiting calls: collectors can't call more than 7 times in 7 days for a specific debt, nor call within 7 days of a conversation about that debt. It aims to prevent harassment, applying to calls, texts, and emails, though exceptions exist, and the presumption of compliance can be rebutted by aggressive call patterns like rapid succession or highly concentrated calls.
A "609 dispute letter," often mischaracterized as a means of getting negative information removed from a credit report, is a name sometimes applied to a formal request for disclosure of credit information compiled by one of the national credit bureaus (Experian, TransUnion or Equifax).
For most people, increasing a credit score by 100 points in a month isn't going to happen. But if you pay your bills on time, eliminate your consumer debt, don't run large balances on your cards and maintain a mix of both consumer and secured borrowing, an increase in your credit could happen within months.
Clearly state your request: Tell the lender what you'd like them to do, whether it is removing a late payment from your credit report, waiving a late fee or some other leniency. Provide documentation: Add proof of your situation and how it's improved with the letter, if you have it.
The document is a letter disputing multiple billing errors on a consumer's credit report under the Fair Credit Billing Act. It demands that the creditor provide proof of late payments or update the accounts to paid as agreed.
If a late payment was reported correctly to one of the three main credit bureaus (Experian, TransUnion and Equifax), that late payment will not be removed. Credit repair companies don't have any backdoor access to the credit bureaus or unique abilities to remove late payments.
The 2/3/4 rule is a guideline, primarily used by Bank of America, that limits how many new credit cards you can get: no more than 2 in 30 days, 3 in 12 months, and 4 in 24 months, helping to prevent over-application and manage hard inquiries on your credit report. While not universal, it's a useful benchmark for responsible card application, though other banks have different rules (like Chase's 5/24 rule).
The 11-word phrase often cited to stop debt collectors is "Please cease and desist all calls and contact with me, immediately," which leverages your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) to halt most communication, though it must be sent in writing via certified mail to be legally binding, and collectors can still notify you of lawsuits.
To erase late payments on your credit report, you must show that the information reported is inaccurate. If you believe an error has been made, disputing the late payment can help resolve the issue.
Contact the creditor who reported the missed payment directly and include any document proving you paid, such as a bank statement or payment verification email. The creditor will conduct an investigation. They'll update the credit agencies to correct or remove the missed payment record if they agree there was an error.
Debt collectors must prove three key things: that the debt is yours, that the amount is correct and that they have the right to collect it. If they can't, they're not allowed to continue pursuing you for payment.
Goodwill letters — A goodwill letter asks a creditor to forgive a one-time late payment and to stop reporting the accurate late payment. But creditors must report information accurately and aren't required to make adjustments, so results vary and aren't guaranteed.
Reasons to Issue a Stop Payment