| Correcting
Credit Card Billing
Errors |
Your credit card issuer will provide you with a statement
for each month in which there is a balance owed on your account. If you
believe a statement contains an error, such as a charge for an item you
didn't order, the federal Fair Credit Billing Act protects you. Here's how
this law works:
First, you must notify the creditor as soon as possible
after you discover the suspected error, but no later than 60 days after
you receive your statement. You must notify the creditor about the error
in writing - a telephone call won't protect your rights.
Once the creditor receives your written notice of the
problem, it has 30 days to acknowledge that it has received the billing
error notice. Within 90 days of receiving your written notice, the
creditor must either correct the billing error, or notify you that it has
investigated your problem and either will not correct the alleged error or
make only a partial correction, and explain the reasons for its decision.
If the creditor exercises this option, you have the right to request any
documentation which the creditor used to reach its decision.
While your claim is being investigated, you have the right
to withhold payments relating to the disputed amount. If the creditor
agrees that a mistake was made, it must credit your account for any amount
which you paid due to the improper billing, along with any finance or late
charges that were imposed.
If the creditor refuses to acknowledge the error after
investigating your claim, it must allow you at least 10 days from the time
it notifies you that it has rejected your claim in which to pay the
disputed amount. If you still refuse to pay, the creditor can report you
to a credit bureau as delinquent. But if you notify him in writing that
your refusal to pay is based on your continued belief that the bill is
incorrect, any report it makes to a credit bureau has to disclose that
your refusal is based on a dispute about the bill's legitimacy.
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